Best Dark Spot Concealers for Caucasian, Hispanic, Asian and African-American

Best Dark Spot Treatment Reviews--Sunscreen

Freckle fading is useless if you slack on SPF. "The combination of UVA and UVB encourages the pigment-making cells year-round," says dermatologist Jeannette Graf, author of Stop Aging, Start Living.


To avoid new dark spots, you'll need a sun block that shields you against both.


Dark Spot Treatment Products—30 SPF or Higher

Scan ingredients lists for titanium, zinc, or Helioplex (try Neutrogena Spectrum +  Sunblock Lotion SPF 70, $12), which block probably the most UVA," says Dr. Graf.

UVB protection is shown by the SPF level. SPF 30 is the minimum the greater you decide to go, the less spots you will see.


Dark Spot Concealer

Since fading dark spots takes time, Joanna Schlip, celebrity makeup artist for Physicians Formula, describes how you can achieve perfect complexion  quickly with the proper shade of concealer for the tone.


If You are: Caucasian COVER-UP COLOR:

Pinkish beige. This tint best hides light-skin freckles without washing out skin.


Recommendation for Dark Spot Concealer:

Revlon Age Defying Moisturizing Concealer in Light, $10.



If You are: Asian Dark Spot COVER-UP-COLOR:

Yellow. Creamy versions of the hue offer major coverage and blend with the existing undertones in the skin.


Recommended Dark Spot Concealer Product:

T. LeClerc Correcting Fluid in Banane, $35.



If You are: Hispanic

Peach. Melasmalike clusters have different colors. This shade combines pink and yellow, eliminating the wide spectrum of discoloration.


Recommended Dark Spot Concealer Product:

Bobbi Brown Spot Treatment Corrector in Peach, $35.



If You are: African-American Dark Spot COVER-UP COLOR:

Orange-brown. This blend cancels out dark spots and keep skin warm and preventing a chalky finish.


Recommended Dark Spot Concealing Product:

Estée Lauder Double Wear Stay-in-Place Concealer in Extra Deep, $20.



Trouble Zones for Your Tone: Brown spots form within the deep layers of skin, where melanin (your natural pigment) is produced. Your ethnicity, however, determines what really appears on the surface.

Legend for Chart:

A - ETHNICTY

B – WHAT YOU SEE

A

    B

Caucasian

    Light freckles, most commonly located on the nose, forehead, and

    cheeks. Fair skin lacks natural defense against the sun. If

    sun block is not used, skin will overproduce pigment to defend

    itself.



Hispanic

    Clusters of medium-tone dark spots or patches (referred to as melasma

    and very common among Hispanics), usually around the cheeks and upper

    lip and between your eye brows. Again, they are spurred by UV sun rays.



Asian

    Freckles on sun-exposed areas. They're darker in tone than on

    Caucasian skin but lighter than  on Hispanic skin - this really is

    because natural melanin levels in Asians lie between those the

    other two ethnicities.



African-American

    Dark spots if your skin is around the lighter side (less pigment, or

    natural sun protection, means freckles) or dark splotches where

    skin was injured. Inflammation (from, say, an acne breakout) kick-starts

    pigment in dark skin (think the way in which lighter skin looks pink as it

    heals).



SOURCE: Skin doctor SUSAN TAYLOR, AUTHOR OF Rx FOR BROWN SKIN

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