Skin
A simple guide to healthier, clearer, glowing skin
Parts of this page:
- Introduction
- Skin type
- Basic skincare routine
- Advanced skincare routine
- Skin brigtening
- Other skin boosters
*Disclaimer: This page is for general information only and not a substitute for professional skincare or medical advice. Everyone’s skin is different — always patch test new products and consult a dermatologist if you have serious skin concerns.
Introduction
Your skin is the body’s largest organ, and it plays critical roles:
Acts as a physical barrier against pathogens, UV radiation, and toxins
Regulates temperature, hydration, and vitamin D synthesis
Reflects internal health: hormones, inflammation, nutrition, and sleep all show on the skin
Strongly influences social perception — studies show clear skin is associated with health, attractiveness, and even trustworthiness
From a physiological perspective, good skin = healthy epidermal turnover, balanced sebum, and low inflammation. From a social one, it’s your “face to the world.”
Your skin type
Your skin type determines what products and routines work best. Use the right routine for your skin’s needs:
Oily Skin
Signs: Shiny, prone to breakouts, large pores
Care Tips:
Gel or foaming cleansers
Oil-free moisturisers
Niacinamide or BHA
Don’t over-wash
Dry Skin
Signs: Flaky, tight, dull
Care Tips:
Cream or milk cleansers
Thick moisturisers with ceramides
Hyaluronic acid serum
Avoid harsh scrubs
Combination Skin
Signs: Oily T-zone, dry cheeks
Care Tips:
Gentle cleanser
Lightweight moisturiser for T-zone, richer cream for cheeks
Targeted masking (clay + hydration)
Sensitive Skin
Signs: Redness, irritation, reacts easily
Care Tips:
Fragrance-free and alcohol-free products
Soothing ingredients like centella or aloe
Patch test everything
Minimal routine
Normal Skin
Signs: Balanced, smooth, few issues
Care Tips:
Maintain with basic routine
Add serums as needed
Don’t overdo it
Basic skincare routine (quick & effective)
For most people, a consistent minimalist routine already provides large benefits.
Cleanser
Removes excess oil, pollutants, dead skin, bacteria
Choose a gentle, pH-balanced cleanser (≈ pH 5.5)
Over-cleansing disrupts the skin barrier (stratum corneum)
Moisturizer
Replenishes lipids and water in the skin barrier
Look for ceramides, hyaluronic acid, glycerin
Especially critical for dry or barrier-impaired skin
Sunscreen (SPF 30+)
UV radiation = major cause of photoaging and skin cancer
Broad-spectrum sunscreen prevents DNA damage and pigmentation
Daily use reduces risk of wrinkles, sagging, and sunspots
Advanced Routine (For Targeted Concerns)
If you want to address acne, pigmentation, aging, or texture, add:
Toner (optional): hydrates and preps skin; avoid high-alcohol toners
Exfoliants
AHAs (glycolic, lactic): resurface and improve dullness
BHAs (salicylic acid): penetrate pores, useful for acne
Serums
Vitamin C (ascorbic acid): antioxidant, fades dark spots
Niacinamide: reduces inflammation, sebum, and redness
Retinoids (retinol, tretinoin): increase cell turnover, reduce wrinkles
Eye cream (optional): for puffiness, dark circles
Face oil / occlusive: lock in hydration at night
Use actives slowly (1–2×/week → build up) to avoid irritation or barrier damage.
Skin whitening & brightening
“Whitening” usually refers to reducing hyperpigmentation, not changing natural skin tone.
Science-based ingredients:
Vitamin C: inhibits tyrosinase (enzyme in melanin production)
Niacinamide: slows pigment transfer to keratinocytes
Arbutin / Licorice extract: melanin suppression
Sunscreen: prevents new dark spots
Other skin boosters
Hydration: Drink 2L of water daily
Sleep: 7–9 hours for overnight skin repair
Diet: Eat clean — avoid sugar, add fruits and healthy fats
Clean Environment: Change pillowcases weekly, avoid touching your face
Stress Control: Stress can trigger breakouts and dullness
Skincare by Skin Type
| Skin Type | Characteristics | Care Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Oily | Shiny, enlarged pores, acne-prone | Gentle foaming cleanser, lightweight moisturizers, BHAs, niacinamide |
| Dry | Flaky, tight, dull | Creamy cleanser, occlusive moisturizers, avoid alcohols |
| Combination | Oily T-zone, dry cheeks | Balance actives, target oily zones with BHA, hydrate dry areas |
| Sensitive | Easily irritated, red | Minimal ingredients, fragrance-free, barrier-supportive routines |
| Normal | Balanced, few breakouts | Maintain with mild products, sunscreen, antioxidants |
Resources/Further reading
American Academy of Dermatology (AAD)
National Institutes of Health (NIH) – Dermatology Research
World Health Organization (WHO) – UV Radiation and Health
JAMA Dermatology (2020): Diet and Acne
Mayo Clinic – Skincare Basics