Categories: Insider

Facts About Using a Lip Scrub

A sibling to the more popularly known body scrub, lip scrubs should never be overlooked. Our lips are not only a visual focal point of our faces, but they’re also particularly sensitive. When the lips are uncomfortable, everything including eating, talking and kissing is impacted. This is where using a lip exfoliator works to your aid.

One way to maintain the delicate skin framing in our mouths is to exfoliate away dead, flaky cells. In this simple guide, we will tell you some of the most important things you should know before getting yourself a lip exfoliator.

Using a Lip Scrub

Before using a lip exfoliator, you should first wet lips. Once done, you should apply your store-bought lip exfoliator or homemade mixture directly onto damp lips. It would be ideal t o use small, circular finger motions for about 30 seconds before rinsing off with lukewarm water. Be sure to use short, light strokes if applying with a sponge or brush.

The thing with using a lip exfoliator is that it’s good for softening and smoothing lips before applying lipstick, or when your lips are dry and peeling from cold wind or prolonged sun exposure. Avoid using them if your lips have any open cuts, or if they’re sunburned or raw.

Lip Scrub Ingredients: What to Look for

Most lip scrubs tend to use a creamy or oily base. These bases include emollients, which are substances that help soften, soothe, and moisturize the skin. Some of the most common emollients you’ll find in lip exfoliator include shea butter, coconut oil, avocado oil, coconut butter, grapeseed oil, jojoba oil, and pure Vitamin E oil.

Many lip scrubs on the market also contain humectants, ingredients which promote moisture retention by attracting water to skin’s surface. Common humectants include aloe, glycerin, and honey.

Finally, exfoliants are the tiny solid fragments that actually buff away dead skin; these are mixed into the base ingredients. Gentle exfoliants include fine-granule white or brown cane sugar, coffee grounds, and coarse oats.

Even though both natural and synthetic emollients, humectants, and exfoliants may be found in store-bought lip scrubs, creating your own homemade, natural lip scrub is simple. But you don’t have to limit yourself to this alone. Now more than ever, you can order a lip exfoliator online at DIOR Singapore and save yourself the hassle of making one from scratch.

Zion Roelofs

Zion Roelofs bestselling author and renowned speaker on leadership and personal development. He has written several books on the subject. Zion's work has been featured in The Business Review, and The New York Times. He is a sought-after keynote speaker and has addressed audiences at major events around the world. Zion holds an MBA from Stanford University and a degree in psychology from the University of California, Berkeley.

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