Cara Melo
  • HOME
  • About
  • ARTICLES
  • Beauty Blog
  • Diet Blog
  • HYPNOTHERAPY
  • Contact

Look your best with these Results Oriented Tips

Strange Ingredients People Use for Anti-Aging

12/10/2015

0 Comments

 
Picture
I consider myself a trendsetter, not a trend follower, but if Angelina Jolie is getting a bee venom facial, I want one too! This year there have been some unexpected ingredients popping up in the skin care aisle. Apparently snake venom is the new Botox, mink oil is the new coconut oil, and kale is just as good on your body as it is in your stomach. That's right — you should be slathering vegetables all over your face, and this list is taking organic beauty to a whole new level. Each of these actives has been proven to give you brighter, tighter skin. You can shop the awesome products packed with these unexpected ingredients below. Then, when your friends ask why the heck you're using snail cream, you can wow them with your scientific knowledge.

Caviar

If you're a foodie, you know that there is nothing more luxurious than caviar. But did you also know that you can smear your face with the stuff for smoother skin? La Prairie Skin Caviar Luxe Sleep Mask ($300) uses caviar extract to erase the signs of aging as you snooze.

Plantains

Yep, those overripe bananas and their ilk have beauty benefits, too! Shea Moisture African Black Soap ($5) is made with a mix of plantain extract, palm ash, and African shea butter. The natural ingredients mix to create a highly astringent soap that is good for oily skin types. You can use it to get rid of acne and dandruff.

Kale

The same dark green, leafy vegetable that's taking over the health world is entering the beauty business, too. It's official: kale is way more powerful than Popeye's spinach. Take Nails Inc. NailKale ($14) for instance. The colored polish (and the vegetable) is packed with vitamins A, C, and K, which can help with keratin production.

Chia Seeds

It seems like everyone is adding chia seeds to their recipes for filling, omega-rich snacks. Well, apparently we should have be throwing the mix into our serums and creams too. The Perricone MD Chia Serum ($75) harnesses the antioxidant power of chia for anti-aging benefits.

Bee Venom

A few years ago, bee venom shot to the top of the beauty ingredient list when Kate Middleton got a bee venom facial. The Rodial Bee Venom Eye Cream ($140) fills in fine lines with a plumping effect — probably the same reaction you get from a bee sting.

Snail Slime

Would you let a snail crawl all over your face in the name of beauty? Thankfully, companies have bottled the skin benefits of the slime so that isn't necessary. Products like the Organic Doctor Snail Gel ($20) promise a more even skin tone and boosted elasticity. Derma MD's Apple Stem Cell Lifting Serum ($168) uses the snail secretion filtrate from Chilean snails to reverse the signs of aging and this serum has become one of their best sellers so there must be something in this slime that's delivering visible results.

Salmon Hatchery Water

It's likely you've never heard of salmon hatchery water, but it's the primary active ingredient in all of Restorsea's skin care products, including the Repairing Hand Treatment ($85). The special liquid holds an anti-aging enzyme released during the hatching of salmon eggs, which helps create a wrinkle-free facade.

Snake Venom

OK, the Sonya Dakar Stem Cell Transformer ($195) serum doesn't have real snake venom in it. But the celebrity facialist did re-create a similar numbing effect that freezes fine lines and wrinkles. So, you can forget Botox and ask for a shot of snake venom instead.

Mink Oil

Mink oil has been used to protect leather from water damage for years, and it's apparently great for your skin, too. This ingredient is actually sweat, oil, and fat from the outer pelt of a mink (ferret-like animals who spend a lot of time swimming). Sesbellot Pure Mink Oil ($90) can keep skin hydrated under the harshest conditions. We're not sure this will trump olive oil on our list of favorites, though.

Royal Jelly

Burt's Bees Radiance Day Cream ($12) touts royal jelly — used to feed the queen and larvae in the beehive — as a star ingredient to brighten skin. The cream is packed with folic acid, biotin, and protein.

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Cara Melo

    24 years of skincare, medical aesthetics, and diet experience.

    teacher, trainer, writer, blogger, entrepreneur.

    Salesperson because I believe in something, not because I make money endorsing it.

    #trustworthy #knowledgeable #honest

    Archives

    May 2017
    June 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    December 2015

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • HOME
  • About
  • ARTICLES
  • Beauty Blog
  • Diet Blog
  • HYPNOTHERAPY
  • Contact