What is a Skin Type?
A skin type is what we are genetically born with and pretty much stays with you throughout life, however it may be influenced as we age and go through biological changes.
Dry Skin Type
A dry skin type also called a lipid dry skin, means you have a lack of oil. If you look closely at your skin, you won’t see large pores and will see a finer texture. You never feel oily and never see shine and sometimes could feel tight or taut.
Oily Skin Type
In comparison to a dry skin that has a lack of oil, oily skin has overactive oil glands that love to produce oil, showing up as shiny or greasy and feeling thicker textured. Having oily skin means you may be susceptible to breakouts or congestion if not kept in check. When it comes to using products for oily skin, don’t overuse products to try and ‘strip’ the oil away as you may end up experiencing more oil because your oil glands will produce more, compensating for what you are stripping away.
Combination Skin Type
This a skin type that may feel balanced/drier in the outer part of the face but feel oily and look shiny in the centre part of the face.
Sensitive Skin Type
There is a lot of confusion around sensitive skin type versus sensitised (more on that later). A sensitive skin type is genetic and has generally always been sensitive/reactive. Sensitive skin attributes may include pale skin colour, pale eye colour, flushing and blushing easily and may also suffer from the atopic triad of eczema, asthma or hay fever.
Balanced Skin Type
This can be referred to as ‘normal’ although, there really is no such thing, therefoe we prefer referring as a balanced skin type. This is where your skin is not over oily nor over dry and has a balanced oil flow. This skin type doesn’t feel tight nor is reactive to stimulus and has a regular type of skin texture.