| As my dermatologist said, "it's called sunscreen. It's just a screen. Not a block." |
| Have you never been out in the sun before and observed your skin? I always tan in the sun, never burn, but tan no matter how much suncreen I use or whether I have a hat or try to stay in the shade (indirect sunlight will do it too). Some people just tan really easily. Same with my kids. |
Where do you buy sunscreens with these ingredients? I’d love to try them but I didn’t think they were available in the U.S. |
I live in Canada.
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| Sunscreen doesn’t block 100% of UV rays, so you will still tan if out in the sun. |
| I'm more tan this summer WFH than I have been in years and I am much better at clothes, sunscreen and shade as I've aged. It happens. I think it also depends on your genetics to some degree, my family is all Sicilian- we get tanlines going to the mail box is the joke. |
| I also did not realize sunscreen does not prevent tanning until I had a child with my much darker skinned husband. I’m white as a sheet and don’t tan at all. The only thing that happens to me in the sun is I get a light dusting of freckles and then turn completely pink. Sunscreen prevents me from turning pink, so naturally I assumed it would protect against tanning as well. Nope! I called the dermatologist thinking I must be applying sunscreen incorrectly on my child or using an ineffective brand. She was so amused to have to tell me no, this is just how the sun works on people with actual melanin in their skin. |
Me too! I have a little guy with actual melanin unlike me who is translucent- its so cute that he tans! |
| I have olive skin. I tan in the shade. I don't stress about it. Humans need a certain amount of sun exposure. Just don't overdo it. |
Actually if you are wearing high enough sunscreen and taking care, no you should not be tanning. Sorry people, you're doing it wrong. |
| Jeez, and here I thought I was overly anxious about sunscreen... |
Moron. It depends on your skin color. My biracial son tans from sitting under a reading lamp.
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There is no clinical evidence that regular users of sunscreen do not get enough vitamin D. Even consistent, properly applied sunscreen allows enough UVB for your skin to produce vitamin D. |
Agreed. You need WAY more sunscreen than you think. You are probably applying far less than is required in order to get the advertised SPF. You need between 1/4 and 1/2 of a teaspoon of sunscreen for your face to get the full protection of the advertised SPF. I've measured this out (both 1/4 teaspoon and 1/2 teaspoon) and it is A LOT. I aim to apply 1/4 teaspoon of SPF 50 mineral sunscreen every morning to my face and I reapply throughout the day. I also wear a hat every time I am outside for an extended period of time. I went to the pool all the time over the summer and went to the beach several times and I did't tan or burn at all. For your body, most adults need about 1 oz of sunscreen to get the advertised SPF. Trust me, it is A LOT. Most people apply far too little, which is why they still tan or burn even when applying suncreen. |
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I tanned through sunscreen the last time I was in the US to visit some family and we went on a beach holiday. I was using sunscreen I bought in the USA that time.
I never tan when I use the sunscreen I buy in Europe. And I have heard that our sunscreen is better. Maybe buy sunscreen from outside of the US? |