Do You Need To Drink Lots Of Water?

Julyne Derrick at About Beauty says No - well not for good skin anyway.

Despite years of having this drummed into our heads, this is not
true. It is good to keep your body, including your skin, hydrated,
however the outermost layer of skin does not absorb water since it is
made up of dead skin cells. Moisture level of skin is not determined by
internal factors, but rather external ones, such as cold or hot air,
dry heat and by the number of oil-producing glands you have.

She recommends instead that if you want to hydrate your skin, exfoliate weekly to remove dead skin then apply a rich moisturiser
while skin is still damp.

Of course, drinking plenty of water is good for your body so we would always recommend drinking your 8 glasses of water a day.

Posted in: Skincare- Tips and Advice

10 Foods to Fight Wrinkles

From The Mirror comes this list of 10 foods you MUST eat to fight the combat of wrinkles:

Spinach

For skin that looks 38 per cent younger in just a few weeks, add dark green leafy veg such as spinach, cabbage and kale to your diet every day.

Packed with an antioxidant called lutein. You need 10mg to get results - which equates to about 4oz of spinach or 2oz of kale. Recent French research suggests this will boost skin hydration and elasticity, fighting wrinkles.

Beans

Help your body produce a vital anti-ageing substance called hyaluronic acid. Aim for at least two tablespoons of beans each day - broad or butter beans make a great substitute for mashed potatoes.

Goji Berries

Skin-guru Dr Howard Murad claims they’re the most "nutritionally dense food on the planet". They have nearly 500 times more vitamin C per ounce than oranges - and vitamin C helps you make the collagen that keeps skin firm. They also contain linoleic acid, an essential fat that plumps skin up, making it look and feel younger. Available at Holland & Barrett, they’re most commonly used in smoothies or sprinkled over cereal but also good in salads.

Turkey

Contains a vital skin-friendly protein called carnosine that slows down a process in the skin called cross-linking. When this happens, fibres grow into the collagen of the skin making it stiff and inelastic. This then stops it snapping back when you do things like smile, laugh or frown - and this is what causes smile lines or crows feet. Eat turkey two to three times a week.

Flaxseed

You can gulp this oil down by the spoonful, mix it into smoothies or add it to balsamic vinegar and use it as a salad dressing, but try to have a tablespoon each day.

"Flaxseed is a major source of the healthy fat omega-3," says Suzi Grant, author of Alternative Aging "Skin cells are surrounded by a fatty layer made from this and other fats so, the higher your omega-3 intake the stronger that layer is, and the plumper your skin cells are - which helps disguise lines and wrinkles."

Prunes

One of the biggest causes of skin ageing is attack by substances called free radicals, that break down healthy skin tissues. Nutrients called antioxidants help neutralise these free radicals before they can do any damage - and prunes are the fruit containing the absolute highest level of antioxidants. Blueberries are a close second. Eat five to six prunes, or a small punnet of blueberries, daily to get a great health boost.

Beetroot

This is the top choice of independent nutritionist Carrie Ruxton: "It’s not only a great source of antioxidants, all purple foods contain pigments called anthocyanins that help support collagen production in the skin," she says.

Olives

Australian researchers recently discovered the more olive oil people had, the less wrinkled their skin looked. A healthy fat, oleic acid actually soaks through the membranes of skin cells plumping them up, which then makes fine lines and wrinkles less noticeable.

Chocolate

Chocolate really is good for your skin. In studies in Germany, it was found that after drinking a cocoa-packed drink, blood flow to the skin was boosted (meaning it gets higher levels of nutrients and moisture). It also seemed to be more protected against UV damage - the number-one skin ager. Only dark chocolate contains enough antioxidants to have effects, though.

Red Peppers

Sweet potatoes, carrots and more. Research from Dr Ronald Watson at the University of Arizona has found that the antioxidants in red, yellow and orange foods build up under the skin creating extra UV protection. "The effect is so strong that eating six portions a day for about two months will build a natural barrier equivalent to a factor four sunscreen," says Dr Watson.

In A Pill?

There are numerous skin-boosting supplements available. But are they worth the money or can you get everything you need from your diet?"Supplements are worth considering for skin-boosting nutrients with limited numbers of natural sources, for example evening primrose oil", says Carrie Ruxton.

"Antioxidants such as carotenes, quercetin, vitamins C and E, it’s better to eat the natural foods. A number of studies on single antioxidants given as pills have found no benefit to health. This is probably because the antioxidants work together or with other, as yet unidentified, phytonutrients."

Posted in: Skincare

Five Ways To Look After Your Skin As Winter Comes

Winterwoman
It’s that time of year where we swap our lovely light summer clothes for our winter wardrobe. The evenings get shorter and dark and the air turns cold.

What we need is some help to make sure we look after our skin as it starts to feel the battering of winter.

So, thanks to Skin Care News we have our Top Five Tips for Keeping Your Skin Healthy Through The Winter:

Be Sure To Moisturise

This should always
be the first (and most important) step in treating dry skin and skin that is dry through the weather. Whatever skin moisturiser works
best for you, make sure that you are making it a skin care ritual 3 or
4 times during the day. After a shower is one of the best times as the water helps to hold in the moisture.

Change Your Showering and Bath Habits

Talking of showers, they can be a big culprit when it comes to injured
winter skin. If you often lay in a nice soapy bath up too often, you can be drying out your
already parched skin. Take very short showers and baths, and make sure
that the water is lukewarm, not as hot as you can stand it like most
people usually like.

Be Fashion Sensible When It Comes To Material

Take care of your skin by knowing which fabrics
may irritate your skin. The reality is that some of us just can’t wear
wool or other scratchy fabrics. Wearing light cottons in the summer is fine for
most people, but winter clothes with thicker materials can become major
irritants.

Hydrate From The Inside Out

Remember that a lot of external problems start from within. Be sure to
drink a lot of water and stay well moisturised on the inside, not just
the outside. Take in more water than you usually would to make sure
that your body is getting what it needs while living through the wintery
months.

Create a Better Environment At Home (and Work)

Consider buying a humidifier for your home. This will make the air less dry
and will sooth your skin as you sleep or when you are at home in general.
You can also put jars of water near your radiators to make sure the air in your home doesn’t dry out. Either way, controlling the air
anytime that you can will help reduce environmental damage to your
skin.

It’s Easier Than You Think!

These are just a few pointers to help keep your skin fresh looking and healthy during the winter months.

Skin Care Products Available at Truly Scrumptious

Posted in: Skincare- Tips and Advice

Your Guide To What’s Good For Your Skin

Skin
If ever you needed a guide to what’s good for your skin, here it is.

From Alpha Hydroxy Acids to Yeast Extract…

Link came from this article on Skincare Blog about Soy Beans and the benefits to your skin:

Soybeans are not only good as a protein source for your system, but
also for skin. The protein and vitamin B2 in soybeans will help to
metabolize amino acids, which in return rejuvenate the skin and leave
it soft and glowing. Moreover the essential fatty acids in soybeans, moisturise your skin naturally without any claims of being organic or otherwise.

Posted in: Skincare- Tips and Advice

Top Five Beauty Tips from Alison Young

Over on iVillage,
self-confessed beauty boffin and QVC presenter, Alison Young, reveals her top five insider’s beauty tips for radiant-looking skin.

Gatineau_150

One of which is Gatineau Defi-Lift 3D Resulting Lift Cream, Alison says:

“improves the texture of your skin by minimising the appearance of pores, giving cheeks a firmer appearance and defining cheekbones to create a more youthful look.’

As a Gatineau Salon, we do have this product available to buy. Contact the salon for more details.

Posted in: Skincare- Tips and Advice

What Can A Body Wrap Do For Your Dry Skin?

If you’ve never had a body wrap, you may be wondering what it actually does to benefit you, your body and your skin.

On top of reducing cellulite and body mass (you loose inches) they cleanse and detoxify, leaving you
feeling rejuvenated and alive.

One of the other great benefits that a body wrap will get rid of dead skin cells and chemicals that dry the skin, so
afterwards your skin is moist and has a healthy glow.

For more information, why not read this article from the Open Press.

If you are interested in having an inch loss body wrap, why not check out the website page.

Posted in: Skincare- Tips and Advice

Top 10 Anti Ageing Foods

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We’d all like to stay young looking forever but are we doing the right things and eating the right foods to keep ourselves looking young?
This top ten list of Anti Ageing Foods from Womens Fitness may help.

  1. Avocado - Vitamin E to boost skin radiance
  2. Berries - Boost your circulation with Vitamin C
  3. Cruciferous vegetables, like Broccoli and Cauliflower, help fight toxins
  4. Garlic - helps protect against disease
  5. Ginger - Boost your Digestion
  6. Nuts - plenty of minerals
  7. Soya - protects against disease
  8. Wholemeal Pasta and Rice - Complex Carbohydrates high in fibre
  9. Watermelon - high in Vitamins
  10. Water - and lots of it - at least eight glasses a day.

Another list in Salon Today Magazine (Summer 2006) has a slightly different take on it.

  1. Avocado
  2. Berries
  3. Carrots - beta carotene and skin strengthening zinc
  4. Citrus Fruit - packed with Vitamin C
  5. Grapes - polyphenols - powerful anti-oxidants
  6. Onions - Selenium to boost the immune system
  7. Papaya - potent Vitamin C
  8. Salmon - Essential Fatty Acids to nourish skin
  9. Spianch - Vitamin E, iron, beta carotene and folic acid
  10. Tomatoes - beta carotene, zic and vitamin B3

The healthier you eat, it stands to reason the better you will look and feel. It makes sense, but it’s not as easy as that is it? … or is it?

Posted in: Skincare

Sleeping Beauty

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Ask just about any natural beauty what their beauty secrets are and one of them will be “Getting plenty of rest.” Not only does a lack of sleep cause temporary dark circles and bags under your eyes, but it also
interferes with your body’s natural repair and maintenance system which is hard at work while your body is sleeping. This alone is a great reason to not skip your nighttime skin care routine and be sure and give your skin all of the necessary goodies it needs to do the best maintenance job it can!

Read more about sleep and beauty with all your questions answered at ebeautydaily

Posted in: Skincare- Tips and Advice

Bash Out Those Wrinkles

Gatineaus_focus_anti_wrinkle_treatment_8Gatineau’s Age-bashing de-wrinkler promises to re-inflate grooves and wrinkles with an imediate, visable, popcorn effect.

Melatogening Pure uses a combination of precise-targeted brust delivery and a super-concentrated, anti-ageing formula of active ingrediants, including a retinol like complex, pure marine collogen, botufix, antioxidents and soy extracts to deliver fast results direct to the problem.

This is a Handbag must have, can be applied over make-up and the results take effect after just 30 minutes.

Truly Recommended: Melatogenine Focus Anti-Wrinkle Treatment at £39.50

For more info on this product please call us on 01252 375792 or email info@trulyscrumptiousbeauty.co.uk

Posted in: Skincare- Salon News- Tips and Advice

What Skin Type are you???

Did you know that 60% of men and women in the UK don’t know what skin type they are.

Here is an easy guide to help define whether you have a dry, dehydrated, oily or sensitive skin and the best Gatineau range for your skin type.

Hydramineral_absoluteDehydrated Skin

Dehydrated skin is a skin condition where the skin lacks water. It is mainly due to external factors, i.e air conditioning, central heating, severe weather conditions, sun, wind, smoking, harsh detergents and an inadequate diet.

Characteristics of a Dehydrated Skin

  • Tightness
  • Rough Texture
  • Dull, Sallow skin
  • Fine surface lines
  • Lack of suppleness and firmness
  • Premature ageing

Recommended Product:- Gatineaus Hydromineral Absolute Concentrate (pictured above) £34.50

Nutriactive_day_cream_1Dry Skin

Dry skin is caused by a lack of oil in the epidermis. The hydrolipidic film starts to deteriorate and there is no cohesion of the cells.

Dry skin is usually due to internal imbalances and are more often hereditary. It is a skin with poor sebum secretions, lacking nourishment, and can be extremely irritated.

Characteristics of a Dry Skin

  • Flaky Patches
  • Deeper Lines
  • Tight Pores
  • Matt
  • Dry
  • Irritated

Recommended Product:- Gatineaus Nutriactive Nourishing Day Moisturiser (pictured above) £35.75

Soothing_stick Sensitive Skin

Sensitive skin is a skin with a poor self-defence system against internal and external aggressions. It reacts to weather changes, pollution, stress, spicy foods, alcohol and aggressive products. The skin needs products to reinforce its natural defence system, strengthen blood capillaries, stimulate the micro-circulation and transport oxygen.

Characteristics of a Sensitive Skin

  • High Colour
  • Fine, Fragile Skin
  • Blotchiness
  • Broken Capillaries
  • Sore
  • Reactive

Recommended Product:- Gatineaus Refreshing Soothing Stick (pictured above) £31.75

Moderactice_cleansing_gel Oily Skin

An oily skin is a skin with excess sebum activity. The skin may be a basic oily skin, shiny but with no blemishes or an oily pimpled skin with open pores and pustules. Due to severe medical treatments the skin may be severely dehydrated and sensitive.

Characteristics of an Oily Skin

  • Shiny Appearance
  • Dull
  • Blackheads
  • Large, open pores
  • Papules
  • Pustules
  • Congested
  • Red

Recommended Product:- Gatineaus Primrose Gel Cleanser (pictured above) £17.00

Posted in: Skincare

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