We all know tanning is bad, but I still want to have some color, especially on my legs. However, unlike many of my fellow beauty editors and recovering lay-out-in-the-sun-obsessed friends, I still haven’t incorporated self tanners or spray tans into my beauty routine. Instead, when I have the rare beach outing or pool day coming up, the old, girl-who-used-to-lay-out-in-the-sun-for-hours me instantly resurfaces and I instinctively break out the coconut-scented tanning oil. I just want to become a bronzed babe, is that so wrong?
To find out whether there was such a thing as a way to safely get some color, I asked Ellen Marmur MD, board-certified dermatologist and founder of MMSkincare. “Yes, and no,” she says. “The skin has melanin to protect our DNA from injury. A base tan is not considered safe because DNA mutations happen randomly, even from a little sun, not just from sunburns or chronic deep tans.” She goes on to say that there are always risks when exposing the skin to the sun, but the best way to protect yourself and cause the least amount of harm is by wearing sunscreen with at least 30 to 50 SPF and reapplying every one to two hours when spending extended periods of time in the sun.
I already knew that a safe tan was too good to be true, but I was still in denial. So, when I visited my friend, Lola, in New York during 80-degree weather (and it was still chilly back home in LA), I was immediately on board when she suggested a day at the beach. Even better? It’s legal to go topless at the beach in New York, which means no tan lines, baby! I packed my bag of products, and this is where you might say I’m contradicting myself, because although I was set on getting tanned, I still pulled out all of the stops in terms of sun protection. I brought my current lineup: True Botanicals Skin Barrier Sun Shield, a mineral sunscreen, which I use almost every day, alternating with Shiseido’s Urban Environment Oil-Free Sunscreen. I also brought Vacation’s SPF 30 Baby Oil. Although it’s inspired by how unsuspecting tanners in the ‘80s and ‘90s used to let their skin sizzle underneath the sun’s rays, this one has SPF 30. It wasn’t like I thought these products wouldn’t work, I just had some wishful (read: delusional) thinking that I would still get some color. After all, I tan easily.
I was out there in the sun for a total of three, yes, three hours. I was in heaven, topless and relaxing, as nature intended. I was literally facing the sun, while my friends were shading themselves in the tent Lola brought along. I was certain I’d have a nice color. Well, I was completely wrong. After all that time, my skin was still the same color. I was absolutely shocked. The sunscreens I used certainly did their job—a little too well, if you ask me! My takeaway from this experience? I truly need to just stop trying to relive the tanning days of my youth and get a spray tan already. And for anyone out there looking for the best sun protection ever, try these three! I love all of Vacation’s entire lineup of suncare, and I’ve been loving True Botanical and Shiseido as everyday facial sunscreens, plus, they work wonderfully underneath my makeup.
Cassandra Bankson, YouTube creator, skincare expert, and medical aesthetician, shared tips on how to properly wear sunscreen with makeup. “Sunscreen should be applied at the last step of your skincare routine—before primer, concealer, foundation, etc.—but it can double as a moisturizer or a makeup primer with the added benefit of providing skin protection benefits,” she says. “For a more natural look, opt for lightweight formulas (like Supergoop!) that look and feel invisible on the skin.” Bankson is also launching an SPF product with the K-beauty brand, Isntree, called the Isntree Onion Newpair Sunscreen SPF 40 PA +++. I’m very intrigued by this one because it’s a purple sunscreen that contains Muan red onion extract to even out skin tone and blur acne scars. The product will be out on YesStyle and Stylevana on June 15, and on Amazon in July.
Some days, I use my sunscreen as a moisturizer and primer, like Bankson suggests, but not all sunscreens work for that. My favorites for SPF primers are E.L.F. Cosmetics Suntouchable! (honestly obsessed and love that it’s $14) and Saint Jane Beauty (my game-changing primer).
Ahead, see more of my favorite sunscreens as well as new ones that I’m excited to try.
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