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Style & beauty

Anti-ageing creams

(29 Posts)
EGNAN Fri 31-May-13 19:22:37

After using Boots 'Traditional Skin Care' for donkeys years, i was coerced into buying their No 7 'Lift & Luminate' (day cream) Really like the uplifting look, but at £22 a time, it works out nearly 30 x as expensive !!! Being on a modest pension, I dont know if i can justify the the cost, so have been looking for a cheaper alternative. But, what a mine-field - anti-ageing creams sure are big business these days ! Fortunately, i dont suffer from wrinkles, but would like to give this old face a bit of a 'youthful glow', so anyone got any more-affordable recommendations?

rosesarered Mon 17-Feb-14 13:32:23

absent shock

absent Mon 17-Feb-14 03:37:54

Flowerofthewest I think cream for piles is said to be a quick and easy way of getting rid of bags under the eyes. I also think that there are other brands besides the one you mention.

Flowerofthewest Mon 17-Feb-14 00:29:01

What about the cream for piles which is good for something or other facially.Also the baby butter bum cream. I heard that that was selling out at one point. Anusol here we come. ( I do wish they would name it differently)

rosesarered Sun 16-Feb-14 20:22:11

Yes Flower you can join in; you can all join in, and we shall link arms and go forth proclaiming 'They are OUR wrinkles and we are proud of them!We have EARNED these wrinkles.'

TriciaF Sun 16-Feb-14 09:38:23

There's a cream called ialuset which my doctor prescribed for healing a leg wound. I looked it up and it's also supposed to be marvellous for getting rid of wrinkles.
So worth trying, although maybe you need a prescription.
I use Nivea.

janerowena Sat 15-Feb-14 23:59:22

Are we like trees, the number of rings of wrinkles show how old you are?

Flowerofthewest Sat 15-Feb-14 20:54:16

Oooh! can I join in too please rosesarered

rosesarered Sat 15-Feb-14 20:00:32

Shall we get together and compare our wrinkly necks?Count to three and then whip our scarves aside! grin

Grannyknot Fri 14-Feb-14 14:55:20

JBR, only just got back to this thread. No it's not that exact one, but it is an 'emollient cream' so it is similar.

FlicketyB Fri 14-Feb-14 14:40:52

Lots of moisteriser, any moisteriser, cheapest quite satisfactory then massage it into your face for several minutes. Its the massage that matters.

Aka Thu 13-Feb-14 22:07:02

Exactly Whitewave

I use baby wipes for cleansing, whatever (cheap)cream was on special offer I happened to fancy when last in a Boots.

A touch of tinted moisturiser in the morning and I'm ready to take on the world (or at least my small part of the world)!

whitewave Thu 13-Feb-14 21:39:41

blimey mygrannycanfly bit different to my soap and water and a quick whip around with some E45 occasionally! I really ought to make more of an effort, probably why I have got bags etc.

janerowena Thu 13-Feb-14 21:02:27

I'm glad you explained about the oil on top of the moisturiser - I never could work that one out so used them alternately. I use nice moisturisers, but always use almond oil. It seems to work well for me.

mygrannycanfly Thu 13-Feb-14 20:55:49

A good cream should last 10 months, so sometimes the extra cost can be justified. It depends what you want in a cream.

If you don't mind about packaging and fragrance, try baby products! You can use baby sun cream as a day cream - and anything with milk protein in is pretty fab. Beauty trade people secretly apply a thin layer of sudocream on their faces at night once or twice a week. It's great!

You can use any cream on your face which suits your skin, use enough and spend 2 minutes massaging it carefully on to your face - the massage is half the benefit. Use gentle. stroking movements away from your heart, lifting and smoothing wrinkles and don't drag at delicate skin. The massage stimulates the circulation and that is what benefits.

The best natural products for mature skin are rose, pomegranate and honey IMHO. I like the Dr Organic range at Holland and Barratt. I think the royal jelly eye cream is good too - it gives me nearly as good a result as a cream 7x the price!

Buy a facial oil as well and put a little of that on over the top of your moisturiser - the oil will seal in the moisturiser. Facial oils feed your skin and don't make your skin greasy. You can pierce a food supplement oil capsule and squeeze that on to your face - just don't use fish oil LOL

Drinking more filtered tap water than you want will also make a big difference to your skin. It's got to be water, not herbal drinks or squash - no I don't know what miraculous properties water has, but I can drink pints of other drinks without any benefit, but once I made the effort to drink at least a pint and a half of filtered water, I could see the difference - and the backs of my hands were less wrinkled and dehydrated as well! It does have to be filtered though, I tried unfiltered drinking tap water and my knees swelled up!

Finally, remember that you need to encourage your skin to shed the dead cells - you can buy muslin flannels in Boots which are about the right texture. You can make a diy face scrub using porridge oats - not jumbo oats, moistened with any food product such as oil or cream. Exfoliate at night not in the morning and don't use a scrub more than 3 times a week.

jinglbellsfrocks Fri 07-Feb-14 09:38:07

I have heard that these products are very good I sent for some and got some free samples as well. (haven't actually started them yet)

You can also get it in Marks and Sparks, as I saw after I had sent away.

jinglbellsfrocks Fri 07-Feb-14 09:31:08

Grannyknot is this the one you use? (comes in a bigger pump bottle from the chemist) I find it the best thing available for my bit of leg excema.

glammanana Fri 07-Feb-14 09:28:41

I had been using Liz Earl products for a long time but last year on GN I learned about Lidl cream/serum and have used it ever since with excellent results and more money in my pocket,I have also been using Nivea Primer under foundation and find it gives a really smooth finish,it can be worn without foundation if you have a day in doors the skin feels so soft.When we where small mum used to load us up on VitC by way of fresh oranges every day which she blended we would have to drink it every morning before we went to school but now I rely on tablets and am lucky not to have been bothered by a cold for quite sometime.

janerowena Fri 07-Feb-14 08:46:49

I have to agree with Ashley - I had been taking vitamin C tablets every day for donkey's years and had an excellent skin. Then with my son going away and my morning routine being changed, I no longer bothered. Despite using all the same serums and creams, all of a sudden I have wrinkles, as if overnight. Vitamin C is good for skin as well as colds - I have had more of those this winter too. So it's back on the tablets for me, and I had better try out that serum too.

Ashley87 Fri 07-Feb-14 08:31:00

Message deleted by Gransnet for breaking our forum guidelines. Replies may also be deleted.

Marelli Sat 01-Jun-13 21:19:43

I wonder if your skin cream is the same as the only one that works for me, Grannyknot? Diprobase? I use it day and night on my face and I think it's as good as anything!

Deedaa Sat 01-Jun-13 21:13:41

There's a very good American skincare expert (can't remember the name!) who says skin is skin and if it works on one part of your body it'll work on the rest of it.

Grannyknot Sat 01-Jun-13 14:27:53

I was given prescribed a huge pump action bottle of dermatological emollient cream by the GP when I had a skin rash a while ago, when the pharmacist handed it to me, I exclaimed "Blimey that will last me for the rest of my life!" Anyway, waste not want not, the skin condition I was prescribed it for has long since gone but it works wonders as a face cream grin. Was completely OTT though, no wonder the NHS is in financial straits.

EGNAN Sat 01-Jun-13 12:09:46

Thank you everyone - Aldi/Tesco, here i come!

Deedaa Fri 31-May-13 22:31:22

I always use Aldi's serum and it seems to work as well as anything. For a youthful glow you can get good results using Tesco's Face Lift by Barbara Daley under your normal foundation.

Before I was married (and could afford it!) I used to use Helena Rubinstein's face creams and I remember her saying that what mattered was using them regularly. It was much better to use a cheap cream every day rather than use something sparingly because you couldn't really afford it.

FlicketyB Fri 31-May-13 21:05:23

I just use lots of moisteriser, in my case organic because of my skin allergies.