If you take one thing away from this story, let it be this: owning loads of skincare products doesn’t mean you’re guaranteed great skin. In fact, I’d go as far to say it will likely be making the state of your complexion worse. In my many years as an acne-sufferingbeauty editor, I have finally come to accept that being a skincare minimalist is the secret to a great complexion. How do I know this, you ask? Because I found out the hard way.
You see, for years the beauty industry has been selling us a very lucrative lie. A few years ago, about the same time beauty really took off on social media, brands started educating us on individual skincare ingredients. They had us believing that such ingredients were ‘new’ and were set to be game-changing. I’m talking the likes of hyaluronic acid, vitamin C, niacinamide, and acids. Once we were suitably educated on their abilities, brands began selling us products that champion those ingredients. Nowadays, we have glycolic acid toners, hyaluronic acid serums, vitamin C masks and niacinamide cleansers. Before I knew it, I was applying a minimum of eight products to my skin morning and evening.
As my skin became gradually more troublesome and my acne began flaring up more regularly over the years, I started feeling increasingly more lost when it came to my skincare routine. As a beauty editor who knows the ins and outs of every skincare product and ingredient out there, even I couldn’t get my routine right–so how the hell was anybody else supposed to? When I reached out to skincare experts, their solution was always the same: reduce the amount of products I was using. But how can I? I thought. Surely my skin needs all of these vital ingredients?
And the truth, I have learned, is that yes, my skin does benefit from all of the ingredients, just not in separate formulas. You see, I’m going to let you in on a very big secret: layering your skincare products isn’t nearly as good for your skin as brands would have you believe, it just makes them a lot of money. Why sell one product, specially formulated with an array on ingredients designed to work in tandem, when they could split that ingredient list up into five different serums and sell them all individually?
“A common mistake is people using too many products without the supervision of a skincare expert. Each product alone can be effective, but when layered with one or more of the other ingredients, it can cause irritation and dryness to the skin,” says Ridah Syed, Senior Medical Aesthetician at Skinfluencer. And this is where the issue arises. The fact of the matter is the average beauty consumer is not a cosmetic formulator. We simply cannot retain the amount of information required to know exactly what products should be used when, how and where. So, we slap them all on, hope for the best and, as was my case, ruin the state of our skin while we’re at it.
For the sake of my skin, sanity and bank balance, I have once again started reaching for products that I know have been formulated to deliver a bunch of benefits all at once. “Multi-benefit products don’t focus on one single ingredient to the exclusion of others, rather they take a more comprehensive view. In general, these products are formulated with a blend of antioxidants, skin-replenishing ingredients, as well as skin-restoring ingredients to help keep skin healthy and looking its best,” says Helen Cowan, Senior Skin Therapist at Dr Nestor’s Medical Cosmetic Centre, Edinburgh.
Such products are what I like to call minimalist skincare. Their ingredient lists might be far from minimal, but their nature very much is. All I need is a cleanser to remove grime and keep breakouts at bay without drying my skin, a well-formulated, potent antioxidant serum to fend ageing off free-radical damage (such as that caused by UV rays and pollution), a moisturiser that delivers essential hydration and supports the antioxidant protection of my serum (some days I’ll use one or the other), and an everyday SPF. For when my skin needs some more targeted help, instead of trying to concoct my own routine, I simply reach for wash-off skin treatments and masks.
Since abiding by this regimen and adopting this mindset, I can safely say my skin has never looked better. The products are, by their nature, a little more expensive than the affordable, single-ingredient serums I’ve been used to, but they really work. Instead of buying ten products at £15 each, I buy two products at £60, or if I’m feeling spendy, one product at £120.
If you can relate to this feeling of total skincare confusion, keep scrolling to discover the 16 minimalist skincare products that have saved my skin.