will try to research any naturally occurring sunscreen that works as well.
the active ingredient in sunscreen is zinc oxide or titanium oxide. You need to find out if you are using a product that has real SPF or just glycerol and beeswax, the rest of it a form of false advertising. Manufacturers make it a point to put the ingredients in very fine print. If your SPF product does not have the ingredients that shield your skin from ultraviolet rays, maybe you can do more research.
You can try using a beige-tinted matte moisturizer with SPF15 and above or if you are still using a face powder, you cay opt for one with SPF18 or SPF 25 or SPF 30.
the sun nourishes our bones while our skin perishes with it… if we do not cherish with a… sunscreen ….
This is what white sunblock looks like at 7k – apparently it melds with the sun, so don’t worry about looking like a plaster-of-Paris cast at 4am. It melts, melds, bends, blends, wends –
— tell me if i’m using non-existent words. (photo shot from a phone at 6:30am)
[i’m allergic to extreme ultraviolet rays (symptoms include: skin rash on exposure to midday sun); last October, the skindoctor told me it was “skin asthma” — now you tell me, nobody tells me these things (she’s good, she was even able to tell, just by looking at the skin, that i had allergic rhinitis); the SPF50 you saw here is doctor-prescribed. after shower — it’s just over-the-counter beige-tinted SPF30 before stepping out. and that’s my health post for today. see you on the outer rim)