tales from the ditch


product review: Tinted Love moisturizer from Designer Skin

I’ve been using Tinted Love moisturizer from Designer Skin for about three months.  This product is great!  If you’re sick of streaky orange tans from a cheap drugstore bottle, this is the one for you.

Fragrance

The Tinted Love lotion has a “Kiwi Pear” fragrance, according to the manufacturer, which basically just smells light and fruity and a little bit sweet to my nose.  Think strawberry ice cream crossed with fresh watermelon, or daquiri mix, or something like that.  It’s certainly pleasant and not overpowering.

Moisturizing

On a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 representing “parched like an alligator” and 10 representing “just dipped myself in a vat of jojoba oil,” I give the Tinted Love moisturizer a moderate 6.  The lotion gives enough moisture to knock out any dry, scaly patches I might have, but it soaks right in and doesn’t leave a residue.  It’s just right for after my morning shower, but isn’t enough for serious winter dryness.

DHA Self-Tanner

The self-tanning component of Tinted Love is DHA-based.  So, about 12 hours after application (maybe as soon as six hours, depending on your body chemistry), you’ll get that post-tanning-lotion smell that is the DHA reacting with your skin.  However, it’s very mild, and is not bothersome to me, and is certainly less than its drugstore equivalents.

The tanning Tinted Love provides is very, very even and never streaky, no matter how hurriedly I apply the lotion.  Tinted Love falls into the category of gradual tanning lotions, and with my very pale skin, it takes about three consecutive days of application before I look like I have a healthy glow.  If you have darker skin, this will help you maintain your tan, but it won’t do the whole job.  For that, I recommend more serious bronzing products.

Sometimes, DHA-based self-tanners will turn your palms and feet orange.  Well, I’ll tell you guys one more time, this does not happen if you invest the money in a decent self-tanner from a company that specializes in manufacturing tanning lotions, like Designer Skin or Australian Gold.  These products have additional pH-balancing ingredients that help your skin absorb the DHA in a way that won’t turn you into a carrot.  So, yes, you can get a gradual self-tanner from your local big-box retailer, but if you actually want a good tan, just pull out an extra $10 or $20 and get something from your local tanning salon (or buy a lotion on Amazon for half price, like I do).  You can buy a $7 bottle of lotion and then throw it away after two uses, or you can spend $15 on this stuff and have it last for several perfectly-tanned months. C’mon. There’s no reason for orange tans!  This is 2009!

Ingredients

Tinted Love includes moisturizing oils like hemp and avocado, as well as vitamins A, E, and C.  While not all of the ingredients are natural, the ingredients label seems relatively benign to me.  I feel that the beneficial ingredients of Tinted Love outweigh the potentially risky ones.  You’ll find nourishing aloe and white birch in here, but you’ll also find cetearyl alcohol and other “conventional” ingredients, as well as a copious amount of fragrance.  But, remember, if you’re looking to tint your skin artificially, you’ve got to expect some of that.  Again, I’ll use a 1 to 10 scale.  If 1 is “I wouldn’t touch this shit with a 10-foot pole” and 10 is “pure as the undriven snow,” I give Tinted Love an 7 or 8 on the ingredients list scale.

Would I buy Designer Skin’s Tinted Love lotion again?

Yes!  I do plan to buy this product again.  It only cost $15 on Amazon, and you get a whoppingly huge 20-ounce pump bottle.

Coming Soon: Australian Gold Creamy Gelato Derma Dark Review

Also: a new technology has come into the tanning market recently, called DermaDark.  This is a non-DHA tanning agent, and I’ll be doing a review soon on a lotion I’ve purchased that includes DermaDark as its tanning ingredient.  Stay tuned for my review of Australian Gold’s Creamy Gelato lotion, forthcoming sometime in the next few weeks.

Other manufacturers are selling similar lotions under other names.  There’s a natural bronzer from Designer Skin called Opti-Glow, which I assume is similar to Australian Gold’s DermaDark products.  So if you guys like one particular brand over another, look for a non-DHA bronzer!  Most companies are coming out with some equivalent of this.

These products allegedly do not turn orange like DHA.  I’ll let you know what I think of the DermaDark lotion very soon!



how to fix streaky fake tan or mystic tan
April 10, 2009, 5:17 pm
Filed under: orange palms, streaky tan | Tags: , , ,

You’ve gone to the tanning booth.  You’ve used some DHA-based fake tanning lotion.  And now, you’re orange, you’re streaky, and you’ve got a huge special occasion involving a strapless dress – so you’re freaking out.  What do you do?  How do you fix your fake tan?

Truth: there is no “magic” way to fix a fake tan.

HOWEVER… there are a few ways to tone it down a notch or two.

1.  baking soda scrub.  this alters the pH of the skin, and can help recently-applied fake tan chemical (DHA) to not bond as strongly to the skin. if your tan has had a chance to set, though, you might not find this to be effective.

2.  good old fashioned exfoliation.  scrub, scrub, scrub.  microdermabrasion scrub is a good idea here – it’s expensive, but if you’re getting married and buying expensive professional pictures, $60 at the cosmetics counter will be well-spent.

3.  if the above fails, try vinegar.  I like apple cider vinegar from the health food store. you can also try lemon juice.

Only time and scrubbing can really fix a fake tan… but since this seems to be a common problem this time of year, I thought I’d post again on this topic.

I’ve given brand recommendations before for fake tanning stuff, but here they are again:

Fake Bake

Australian Gold (my fave)

Designer Skin

all these brands can be purchased on amazon, or at your local tanning parlor.  Amazon tends to be much cheaper.

When in doubt, get a Mystic done at a professional tanning salon – use the barrier cream provided, do the poses correctly.  It usually turns out really well.



self-tanning accident victim
February 10, 2009, 3:31 am
Filed under: baking soda, orange palms, streaky tan, sunless tanning lotion

So, I go to the local tanning place to buy self-tanner.  Last time I went to the local tanning place to buy self-tanner, I got this amazing lotion that never leaves streaks and doesn’t look orange and smells beachy-fabulous.  

So this time do I buy the same one?  Do I think, “Maybe I should stick with what works”?  No, of course not.  I’m not one of those people who orders the same combo meal every time I eat fast food.  I don’t take the same route every time I walk the dog.  I hate routine.  So I say to the girl at the tanning place, “I’m looking for a good sunless tanner.”
She says I should try the Mystic spray-bottle tan, because it’s the same formula as the Mystic booths at the tanning place.  Well, obviously, those are awesome, so I’m sold, especially for under $20 for a huge-ass bottle of the stuff.
So I get the Mystic spray-bottle tan home and I take it out and the first few sprays go on like a dream.  It looks, feels, and smells identical to the stuff at the salon, and I think this is pretty hot shit.
So I spray a few more times.  And the bottle…starts…leaking.  Not leaking.  Gushing.  I get tanner all over the floor of my bathroom, and in turn all over the bottom of my feet (hello, orange footprints) and my hands (for the love…) and all over the countertop (which is now streaky-brown like my hands) and it’s just not a good scene.  I also have like, this dark streak running down my arm where the bottle leaked and gushed all over me.
Seriously uncool.  Seriously.  I recommend, for those of you who are wondering, that you buy one of those expensive indoor tanning bronzers if you want a good fake tan.  I like Australian Gold products, but any of those expensive bronzers will do.  I hear that Fake Bake is good, or you could try California Tan or Designer Skin or whatever.  They have other ingredients you don’t need (they are designed for use in tanning beds, and if you don’t use the bed, you don’t need the other stuff) but I’m'a tellin’ ya, they go on even and look amazing UNLIKE all of the other sunless tanning products on the market… including the Mystic spray-bottle.
Oh, and Bare Bronze from Victoria’s Secret is pretty good in the face formula… so there’s that.  It’s not real dark but it doesn’t streak and it smells okay.
So I researched ways to fix my self-tanning accident and apparently I can use baking soda as a scrub on damp skin so I am ALL about that tomorrow since plain ol’ exfoliation didn’t really do much since I exfoliate obsessively anyway and apparently I didn’t have any skin cells to slough off.  
I will maybe let you all know how the baking soda goes.  If it goes well, baking soda will be 2 for 2 on the home remedies.