Here’s how hormones can affect your skin
Hormones play a starring role in your skin’s health. Here’s how your hormones can affect your skin at any age, from menopause and dry skin to pregnancy plumpness.
Hormones play a starring role in your skin’s health. Here’s how your hormones can affect your skin at any age, from menopause and dry skin to pregnancy plumpness.
While your eyes may be the windows to your soul, they’re also one of the first areas to show fine lines and signs of ageing. To help slow down the process, here are the ways we keep crow’s feet wrinkles at bay.
You are not alone facing menopause, we are here to help you understand what is happening in order to help you fight back.
Comparing Vichy’s Neovadiol Rose Platinum and Neovadiol Compensating Complex ranges
As a woman, particularly, the physiology of your skin changes significantly in your 40s and 50s. This is related in part to changing hormonal levels. As these levels fall, there is reduced production of collagen, elastin and other components of the skin matrix
The Camu Camu is a small bushy riverside tree from the Amazon rainforest in Peru, Venzuela and Brazil. Every 100 grams of camu camu berries provides up to six grams of vitamin C, that’s 100 times more than you’d get in the same weight of lemons.
Refined or processed foods tend to contain lower levels of polyphenols, so try and keep ingredients as natural as possible to maximise their benefits.
Your skin is the largest organ in your body so it stands to reason that when your health, diet or emotions are out of whack your skin is often the biggest giveaway. Skin that is healthy is likely to have a slight flush and look alive, hence the term ‘glowing with health’ - it looks completely different to the complexion of an unhealthy person, which is often tired-looking, haggard and sallow (slightly yellow in tone) particularly in the face.