
Why More Skincare Isn't Always Better
There is a quiet pressure in modern skincare to always be adding — a new serum, a trending active, another step that promises to address what the last one didn't.
It's worth pausing on that.
The accumulation problem
Most skincare routines grow gradually. A product is added for one concern, then another for a different one. Before long, the routine has expanded well beyond what the skin actually needs.
The issue isn't any single product. It's the cumulative load — the number of ingredients, the frequency of application, the constant introduction of new variables.
What consistency actually does
Skin responds to routine. When the same gentle, supportive products are used consistently over time, the skin has the opportunity to stabilise and function more effectively.
Frequent changes — even to well-formulated products — interrupt that process. The skin doesn't have the chance to settle before something new is introduced.
Reducing irritation through simplification
Many people find that reducing their routine — rather than expanding it — is what finally allows their skin to feel calmer. Fewer ingredients means fewer potential points of irritation. Fewer steps means less disruption to the skin's natural balance.
This isn't about doing less for your skin. It's about doing what your skin actually needs.
A simpler approach
A considered routine doesn't need to be elaborate. Cleanse gently. Hydrate. Protect. Repeat consistently.
The results of a simple, well-chosen routine — maintained over weeks and months — often exceed what a complicated one can achieve.
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