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rere
New Member
Joined: 13 Apr 2005
Posts: 5
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Wed Apr 13, 2005 10:00 am |
I am 28 and I have a very bad habit that I rub my eyes very often, now, I have some fine lines appeared in the inner corners of my eyes and eyelid. My eyelid now looks a bit "loose"... Is there any recommendation to cure this?
I have mistakenly thought the lines appeared because the skin around my eyes are too dry, so I switched to a rich eye cream, and now, some greasy spots appeared
1) I would like to get an eye product that can have good firming effect for my eyelid (& under eye bag!), but not so rich that my skin cannot take it. Any suggestions?
2) Is there any products that can help me to get rid of the greasy spots that I have around the eyes caused by using an eye cream that's too rich for me?
3) Can Dermalogica Firming Booster be applied around the eye area, and if so, will it help my situation (fine lines & loose eyelids)?
4) Can Dermalogica Daily Microfoliant be applied around the eye area, and if so, help me to absorb oil from those "spots" that I have around my eyes? |
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Wed Apr 13, 2005 10:55 am |
Welcome to the EDS forum!
I have oily eyelids, so I love Orlane B21 Oligo Cooling Balm Eye Contour. It's a light gel-like lotion that works for me (not too rich). A few other members on this forum like this as well.
I have the same problem too. I rub my eyes because I sit in front of a computer monitor all day and or when I'm sleepy. I don't have the lines around my eyes yet, but if I keep rubbing them the lines will show up. |
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rere
New Member
Joined: 13 Apr 2005
Posts: 5
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Wed Apr 13, 2005 11:00 pm |
Thanks, does the eye-gel has firming effect? Yes, I work with computers all day too.. that's probably why. |
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Mabsy
Moderator
Joined: 17 Aug 2003
Posts: 9644
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Fri Apr 15, 2005 10:00 pm |
Rere,
First, I would advise you to stay away from using the Microfoliant around the eye area. You might dry it out completely rather than just the isolated spots. Now, what exactly do you mean by oily spots? Just areas that now produce more oil or do you actually have little bumps that weren't there before? If you do have the little bumps (called millia) then I would suggest using an eye cream with AHAs (e.g. MD Formulations Vit-a-Plus eye cream) *just* on those bumps. If it is just areas where more oil is being produced then that should normalise by itself one you switch to a lighter product. If not then you could try using a dab of something like a normalizing oil (Dr Hauschka has one, Decleor has one as well).
I have heard good things about the Orlane cream-gel that WhiteLotus suggested but I have not tried it myself so I don't know if it has a tightening effect. I also like the Babor Sensational Eyes gel but I wouldn't say that this tightens significantly (and this is a gel, not a cream-gel). Pevonia makes an eye gel (Evolutive Eye Gel) that is actually more like a cream-gel formulation, but, again, I wouldn't call it tightening. The one cream that I did try that was tightening and not too rich was the Phytomer Lift Contour eye cream. I didn't like it myself because of that tightening effect (which is not what I'm looking for in an eye cream - at least not yet...) but I definitely did feel it tighten. |
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Sat Apr 16, 2005 12:24 am |
Hi rere,
I don't have any issues with my eyelids other than that it's oily and tired from looking at a monitor all day. So I couldn't comment on any tightening effects.
Sorry I'm not much help there.
I agree with Mabsy, the Microfoliant around the eye area is not a good idea. Though you have oily eyelids, if you strip too much from the lids, it will only cause the skin to produce more oil. |
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rere
New Member
Joined: 13 Apr 2005
Posts: 5
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Wed Apr 20, 2005 8:41 am |
Mabsy
Thanks very much for your advise. Yes, I believe what I have are millia (good guess!), sorry for the poor English. As suggested, I think I should try to cure the millia by applying MD Formulations Vit-a-Plus eye cream to the millia (maybe by a cotton bud, so the product only land on the little spots?). And I should not apply this to other part of my eyes?
And I think I really should only be patient and cure the millia first before I want to do firming as well Is it too early for me to use firming products or there is actually no set age for this?
WhiteLotus,
No, thanks for your advise. I hope I can cure my problems first and afterwards, I may try Orlane B21 Oligo Cooling Balm Eye Contour
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rere
New Member
Joined: 13 Apr 2005
Posts: 5
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Wed Apr 20, 2005 8:58 am |
Mabsy
I realise there is also a product called MD Formulations Vit-A-Plus Intensive Anti-aging Lotion -> could you kindly advise the main difference between this one and the eye cream you suggested? |
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Mabsy
Moderator
Joined: 17 Aug 2003
Posts: 9644
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Thu Apr 21, 2005 4:21 am |
Rere - the Vit-A-Plus Intensive Anti-aging Lotion has double the concentration of glycolic acid (20% vs. 10% in the eye cream). I would be a bit worried about putting that around the eye area myself.
In terms of the Vit-A-Plus eye cream - it's actually supposed to be used underneath and around the side of the eye area, particularly on mature skins I gather. I spot treat because I don't really need it anywhere else and I don't wont to unnecessarily dry out the skin around the eyes. You could actually just try spot treating (pointed cotton bud is what I use) with a 10% glycolic gel product (if you have one). And I fully agree with you, I think you should deal with this in stages. First, fix the millia. Then after that is over and done with, you can focus on your other concerns. Good luck! |
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Fri Apr 22, 2005 11:08 am |
I am pretty interested in this MD formulation vit a - plus eye cream.
As mentioned earlier, it contains AHAs so would that irritate sensitive skin?
Some products that I have used contained AHAs and it irritated my skin causing little red blotches so I'll just like to know how this product reacted with your skin, particularly if your skin type is a little sensitive.
Thanks! |
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Mabsy
Moderator
Joined: 17 Aug 2003
Posts: 9644
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Fri Apr 22, 2005 5:14 pm |
missykiehls - it's 10% AHA which is pretty high for sensitive skin but I guess it depends on how sensitive your skin really is. What was the percentage of AHAs in the other products you have tried? |
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