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Honored Contributor
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Registered: ‎03-09-2010

@SilleeMee --have a question----so you apply the sunscreen first thing--let it dry down and then proceed with a serum and moisturizer on top? Is that a waste of those products or will serums and the other stuff soak in and do their job?

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@wagirl wrote:

@SilleeMee --have a question----so you apply the sunscreen first thing--let it dry down and then proceed with a serum and moisturizer on top? Is that a waste of those products or will serums and the other stuff soak in and do their job?


 

 

@wagirl 

The only serum that you should apply before sunscreen is vitamin C serum. All other skincare products will do fine after the (chemical) sunscreen is applied and dried. 

 

Applying VC serum before any kind of sunscreen, chemical or mineral, will help the efficacy of the sunscreen used. Just let the VC serum dry down before applying your sunscreen. 

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I use a mineral sunscreen no problem with a white cast, I use Andalou CC Cream SPF 30, which is tinted. 

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@Shelbelle 

When you apply your mineral sunscreen, do you apply the recommended amount of a 1/4-teaspoon on your face?

 

When I did that, there was just no way to avoid the white cast no matter how much I rubbed it in. Rubbing in mineral sunscreens to reduce the white cast is not the correct way to apply it. Also, applying less than 1/4-tsp on the face in order to avoid a white cast is not going to give the proper SPF listed on the bottle.

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@SilleeMee wrote:

@Shelbelle 

When you apply your mineral sunscreen, do you apply the recommended amount of a 1/4-teaspoon on your face?

 

When I did that, there was just no way to avoid the white cast no matter how much I rubbed it in. Rubbing in mineral sunscreens to reduce the white cast is not the correct way to apply it. Also, applying less than 1/4-tsp on the face in order to avoid a white cast is not going to give the proper SPF listed on the bottle.


Honestly , I dont know, I just apply it like it was a regular liquid foundation. And I will admit I dont worry about the amount of coverage I am getting, I am not outside for very long, I just apply it, then add my blush and go. 

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@SilleeMee 

 

O.k. -- thank you! 

"A day without sunshine is like, you know, night." - Steve Martin
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Posts: 2,238
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

I can't tolerate chemical sun screens. They burn my skin. Many years ago I went to Bloomies for a special m/u day. M/u artists came in from N.Y.C. Bobby Brown had become very popular ; I managed to be the  first customer at BB. We were all in a very large area with different brands spaced around the room. No curtains or anything.

 

The BB m/u artist picked the right color for me. I did about half of my face and started screaming. The wonderful m/u artist poured water down my face and very gently toweled me off. I suspect everyone was looking at me ; I didn't notice. My face felt like it was on fire.

 

M/u artist told me it was the chemical s.s. in the foundation. He gave me the names of the ingredients in both s.s. He told me the only foundation at the time with a physical sunscreen was Clinique. 

 

You are right about the white cast. I use Complexion Rescre mattifying foundation. I was on a zoom call; I looked like the tin man from the Wizard of Oz. The zoom lighting probably made it worse. 

 

My derm gave me lots of samples of sun screens; she did say they can give off a whitish cast.

 

I'm on Tretinoin so I have to be very careful in the sun. I live in an urban area and wear a large brimmed hat and big sunglasses.

 

I never could tan so I stayed out of the sun. I was in a study at a cancer research hospital for the first sunscreens. Every one but me got tan.

 

Thirty yrs ago a derm gave me a ''lunchtime peel'' that damaged my skin and gave me a strange kind of acne. Retina micro was the only treatment. After my skin cleared up I kept using it.

 

Two years ago I was hospitalized and I noticed one of the night nurses staring at me. Then another one came in without me buzzing for help. Turned out that the very young nurse who saw me first told her group that I was seventy eight and had no wrinkles. I wrote ''Retina micro" on a slip of paper and told her to leave it in their lounge.