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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Lifestyle
Sali Hughes

Given up using vitamin C serums? Here are some that are gentle enough for sensitive skin

An orange on an orange background. The orange has an orange cosmetic tube placed in the middle of it.
Those who have all but given up on vitamin C – due to redness or itchiness – may find alternatives where it’s deployed more gently. Photograph: Jessica Griffiths/The Guardian

I use a vitamin C serum almost every morning. It gives my skin a brightness and glow, some antioxidant protection, what I believe is a beneficial effect on pigmentation and texture, and it generally agrees with my skin. But frequently I meet women who want to use vitamin C skincare, but have found they can’t – at least not comfortably.

Vitamin C – especially in the form of L-ascorbic acid, the purest, most evidenced but also least stable form in skincare – can be too punchy on sensitive skin types. But there are ways to deploy it more gently. CeraVe’s recently launched Skin Renewing Vitamin C Serum (£29) uses L-ascorbic acid but in a manageable 10% concentration, and buffers it with the brand’s signature complex of ceramides to cushion and comfort the skin barrier. Those who have all but given up on vitamin C may find they can use this with no redness or itchiness.

Another way around the problem is via a different form of vitamin C. There’s increasing industry enthusiasm for tetrahexyldecyl ascorbate, a more stable analogue of L-ascorbic acid. While tetrahexyldecyl ascorbate (let’s go with “TA” for brevity) isn’t significantly gentler, it is oil-soluble and better absorbed, so can be added to skincare at lower concentrations to much the same effect as other ingredients at higher, more skin-aggravating levels. It doesn’t smell great (even for a vitamin C, which is notorious for making skincare stinky), but this should quickly dissipate after application.

Paula’s Choice’s lightweight, skin-friendly Resist Anti-Ageing Ultra Light Antioxidant Serum (£41) is an ungreasy, hydrating, everyday serum that uses TA alongside endlessly helpful niacinamide and hyaluronic acid to soothe, hydrate and protect. It’s a great option not only for sensitive types, but for the many who find vitamin C heavy and greasy-feeling.

For more slip and slick on drier skins, Medik8’s C-Tetra Luxe (£59) mitigates the high-ish 15% concentration of TA with moisturising, softening vegan squalane and high-quality natural, fatty oils. It gives my skin instant bounce and glow.

Skin Rocks’ The Antioxidant Serum is also pricey (£60) and stinky, but prevails by being silky, ungreasily moist, refillable and elegantly formulated with vitamin E-rich green tea, peptides and yet more antioxidants, making it a great all-rounder for after one’s morning cleanse and before SPF. Its whiff is gone in the drinking of a morning cuppa.

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