Products that Help My Pale, Sun-Damaged, Combination Skin Look Good Every Day

The Cleanser

I've been hopelessly devoted to Eve Lom's cleansing balm since my very first time using it. I keep samples of it around in every drawer and bag I come into contact with. The formula helps improve circulation, open your pores, cleanse, exfoliate, and tone your skin all in the amount of time it takes to massage it into your face. The blend of essential oils—chamomile, eucalyptus, and clove— works to melt away dirt, oil, debris, and makeup all the while smelling like a spa. It's perfectly gentle in that it won't disrupt the balance of your skin's moisture barrier but effective enough that'll it'll melt makeup right off, no problem. I apply it dry and massage it into my face, breaking up any tough mascara, foundation, or environmental grossness (pollution, what have you).

As much as I love the balm, Eve Lom's muslin cloths take a close second. They're probably not the first product you'd expect as a blackhead-clearing treatment. I wash my face with them each morning and night, first applying the cleansing balm to dry skin, working it in, and removing with the steamy cloth to really get everything off. The texture of the cloths, though, is where the magic lies. They're not fluffy or entirely soft, just structured enough to do a gentle exfoliation as I wash. I've noticed a significant reduction in the number and size of my blackheads as a result. Plus, it feels so good. It's a miracle.

The Toner

After cleansing, I move to toner, specifically Biologique Recherche Lotion P50 1970 ($65). I first had the tingly, vinegar-scented formula applied to my face during a facial by Toska Husted herself at Toska European Spa, where its dark spot–erasing, pore-shrinking, and complexion-balancing results left my jaw dragging along the treatment room floor. The ingredients are a mix of a few of the usuals like lactic acid, salicylic acid, and citric acid, blended together, with a selection of other, more eyebrow-raising components like onion extract, horseradish, sulfur, and vinegar (which certainly explain the smell). Immediately after drenching a cotton pad with the bottle's contents and swiping it carefully over my face (twice a day, as suggested by Husted), I feel a flush of tingling. It's a sensation that doesn't hurt or feel uncomfortable but instead feels rather satisfying and exciting in that "I can tell this is working" kind of way. It's the one product that has made the biggest difference in my skin, and I'm sticking by it until the end.

The Serums

Because I have combination skin, I need to work hard at exfoliation as well as maintaining moisture. So I always layer on a hyaluronic acid serum to seal everything in and add some much-needed hydration and slip to my skin. SkinCeuticals Hydrating B5 Gel ($83) is a lightweight hyaluronic acid serum meant to restore and bind moisture to your skin for enhanced radiance, suppleness, and comfort. It adds the extra moisture I need (without being too much) right before applying my next step.

Because of my years spent roasting in the sun (shameful, I know), I use this serum at night to better help diminish the appearance of dark spots and discoloration on my face. It's a blend of kojic and tranexamic acids, as well as vitamin B3, to boost your skin's brightness while it minimizes the recurrence of hyperpigmentation.

I've never been a huge fan of retinol, but this one is different. Texture Reform is a gentler retinol serum, formulated with retinyl palmitate, which makes it so it does not cause the peeling, dryness, and irritation that other retinol serums may cause. It also has sodium PCA to help skin hold on to moisture, lactic acid to gently exfoliate, and aloe to soothe. It very literally has safety mechanisms in place to combat the irritation that typically accompanies with retinol, and it makes your skin so clear, bright, and smooth. I use it only a few times a week, alternating with Discoloration Defense (and never with P50).

The Moisturizer

Dr. Barbara Sturm's Face Cream Rich is my most treasured moisturizer—and the one I use most often to keep my skin as line-less and hydrated as possible. Sturm herself calls it "your cell spa while you sleep," as it is so intensely regenerating. The cream incorporates purslane (a succulent herb packed with omega-3 fatty acids) to reduce redness and skullcap extract to stimulate natural collagen production. No lie: Using this moisturizer results in more youthful- looking, healthy skin come morning.

The Sunscreen

I started using this particular sunscreen when Consumer Reports did its Annual Sunscreen Guide and La Roche-Posay was the only sunscreen to receive a perfect score (for the fourth year in a row, actually). It contains avobenzone, a chemical active ingredient which the researchers have found to be more successful at blocking harmful rays than mineral sunscreens containing ingredients like titanium dioxide or zinc oxide. I like to slather it on if I'm not planning on wearing makeup that day. It doesn't disrupt your makeup but it doesn't exactly help either. What it does is protect my skin from the sun, and that's really what I care about most.

When I am planning to wear makeup, I use Tatcha Silken Pore Perfecting Sunscreen Broad Spectrum SPF 35 ($65) because it works just like a primer. It doesn't have a chalky finish, it smooths your skin's texture, and it even tightens the look of pores. Plus, it's super silky, mattifying, and offers an SPF of 35.

Papakonstantinou E, Roth M, Karakiulakis G. Hyaluronic acid: A key molecule in skin aging. Dermatoendocrinol. 2012;4(3): 253-258.

Oliveira MB, do Prado AH, Bernegossi J, et al. Topical application of retinyl palmitate-loaded nanotechnology-based drug delivery systems for the treatment of skin aging. Biomed Res Int. 2014;2014: 632570.

National Center for Biotechnology Information. PubChem Compound Summary for CID 51040, Avobenzone. https: //pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Avobenzone. Accessed Aug. 16, 2021.

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