Lifestyle

DIY skin care for you

Done with the high end treatments and expensive creams, well if yes then we are going to tell you simple DIY skin care products to get your beauty game on point.

Turmeric: This lovely little root may reward you for your efforts. Its active ingredient cur-cumin, show its effectiveness in treating acne, hair loss, sun damage, psoriasis. Turmeric has tons of antioxidant properties and is fairly inert.

Argan oil: The Moroccan people, who have been using this nut oil in food, on their hair, and on their skin for centuries. Argan oil is packed with vitamin E and squalene, and it’s been shown to help with skin elasticity and sunspots. It restores your hair and your skin, and you can put it in a moisturiser or deep conditioning for your hair.

Green and white tea: There are few remedies as easy and pleasant-smelling as using nice, cold tea bags on our eyes after a rough night. Plus, the pretty tint it can give our lotions and potions makes it all seem like it came from a fancy spa. Its tea for the antioxidant properties.

That’s why tea extracts helps protect skin from pollution and the sun. Tea also has anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties, which is whys its effective for treating acne. A few studies have also shown that topical application of  caffeine increases the blood flow in skin, which sounds promising.

Coconut oil: Every other home hair and skin treatment seems to include coconut oil these days, with good reason. Not only does it feel soft and silky. It has natural antifungal, natural antibacterial properties, and it’s very absorbent.

Milk and yoghurt: Like Queens Elizabeth I and Cleopatra before her, applying milk and yoghurt directly to the face when you’re experiencing a breakout or dryness. It really calms down the skin. Cow’s milk helps human skin cells grow. The lactic acid in milk is an alpha hydroxyl acid (AHA) that ex-foliates, moisturises, and reduces sun damage in skin.

Yoghurt has even  more benefits, as clinical trials have shown yoghurt masks improve skin elasticity, moisture, and brightness.

Oatmeal: It contains antioxidants including some that protect against UV rays, anti-inflammatory molecules, water-holding beta-glucos sugars, and cleansing. It’s pretty effective and soothing.

It helps soothe eczema and other itchy, inflammatory skin conditions as well as plain old dryness. Your at-home recipes will probably call for putting rolled oats in a blender, and you’ll get many of the same benefits. However, if you have celiac, avoid using oats that aren’t gluten-free.

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