Thursday 23 August 2012

A Big No to Pigmentation


Get into any girl chat and one of the hottest topics today would be skin whitening. Fairness has always been associated with being beautiful, and fairness without pigmentation and dark spot is what many women aim to have.

To be fair is to have no pigmentation and spot. Pigmentation is formed due to an excess of melanin in the skin, which produces brown pigmentation on normal skin color. The result is that patches of skin become darker than normal skin colour.

UVA causes ageing and UVB causes burning. Both are harmful to our skin!

UV, which stands for ultraviolet, is the radioactive ray emitted by the sun. We all know this is harmful, but do you know why it is harmful? UVA and UVB are the two types of damaging UV rays- UVA causes ageing and UVB causes burnings- and both are very harmful to human skin. UVA rays penetrate deeper into the dermis or base layer of the skin, resulting in a loss of elasticity that causes the skin to sag, wrinkle, and age prematurely. Large doses of UVB radiation cause acute sunburn, redness, burning sensation, and blistering.

UVA rays resulting in a loss of elasticity that causes the skin to sag, wrinkle, dark spot and pigmentation.

UVB radiation cause acute sunburn, redness, burning sensation, and blistering!

So how exactly does UVA rays form pigmentation? Most experts agree that up to 80% of skin aging can be attributed to UVA rays. They activate the melanin stored in the epidermis, and produce a pigmentation effect visible within one hour but usually fade in 24 hours. Many people think by just hiding under the shade or staying indoors, they can avoid UVA rays, but UVA rays can penetrate the glass as well.

UV rays can penetrate the glass, staying indoors is not a solution to hide from UV rays!

Now, you had understood how pigmentation form and what’s the harmful caused by UV rays, share this information with your best friends to prevent form of pigmentation and sunburn. Stay with us for more beauty tips and check out our Facebook Page for more upcoming activities.

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