The key vitamins to focus on when treating melasma are E, C and A. It is very important to treat melasma internally and externally as it is often related to a hormone imbalance in females, sun or skin damage, liver problems or pregnancy. At any rate, the treatment must involve the whole body. I am treating my melasma rather aggressively and so far successfully. Here's my routine in the order I perform it twice daily:
- goat milk soap - wash face well then rinse with clear water, vitamin A, lactic acid, cleanser
- apple cider vinegar - apply with a cotton pad, let dry, repeat, anti-fungal and pH restorer
- lemon juice - apply with a cotton pad, let dry, repeat, vitamin C and natural skin bleach
- aloe vera - apply a generous layer of organic pure aloe vera gel, corrects sun damage and moisturizes
- extra virgin olive oil - apply a thick layer of extra virgin olive oil, let sit 5 minutes then wipe off excess with cotton pad, vitamin E and moisturizer with anti-oxidant properties
- sunblock - apply a generous layer of Neutrogena UltraSheer dry-touch sunscreen SPF 110
HI,
ReplyDeleteFirst of All, I want to express how much I love your tips to treat melasma naturally!
THANKS a lot for all the info :)
I've have had this condittion for four years, with no positive results from creams, since im allergic to most bleachers.
I will follow you skin routine! im sure it will work:)
I have a few questions, I hope you can help me:
Ive been told, that after applying lemon on the skin I must rince because it will darken my stains if I go out, according to your routine you dont rinse right?
And, when I apply aloe vera from my plant, i get a yellowish color, does it happens to you aswell? do you rinse?
And the last question, sorry.
HOw often you do your tumeric mask
THANKS A MILLION!!.. you know how this condittion afects our selfsteem
love
Andrea
Hi!
ReplyDeleteThank you for all these DIY/natural remedies! I developed melasma after I started taking medications for my auto-immune disease. It first started showing up my cheeks, then to on my forehead, and now on the edges of my lips. I'm in my early 20s and don't wear a lot of makeup, so I was confused at first. So now I know it's partly my medications and also the fact that I need to wear more sunblock.
I have a question on your routine: So does this mean you pack on these items to basically have one huge face mask then seal it with the sunblock? I'm just wondering how it's done step by step.