
Ditch the industrial-strength wrinkle creams. We have effective, age-appropriate skin solutions for your 20s and 30s.
So when should you realistically start? “At 20,” says Fields. “Prevention is so much easier than reversal. But even if you cooked yourself in the sun from age 5 to 35” – or subsisted on ciggies and donuts in college – “your skin can still bounce back, at least some of the way.” Which means (broken record alert!) daily sunscreen, along with an age-appropriate cocktail of antioxidants and vitamins, is nonnegotiable. Here, the best strategies for tackling early aging so your skin can go the distance.
Problem: Tired Eyes
The first signs of aging often show up around the eyes. By the time you reach 30, the lower lid no longer blends seamlessly into the cheek, and there is a slight line of demarcation due to volume loss. In layman’s terms? Your once-plump cheeks are starting to deflate, so you get lovely rings under your eyes even after a full night’s sleep. What’s more, the skin around the eyes is so thin that it’s prone to early lines caused by sun and squinting, which together cause elastin to break down.
· Baby-Step Solution: Big UV-protective sunglasses (to prevent squinting and filter sunlight) and a moisturising night-time eye cream with antioxidants and retinol will do a lot to prevent and treat early crow’s-feet.
· Serious Fix: If the rings under your eyes are pronounced to the point where you look tired all the time (thank genetics for that), a derm or plastic surgeon can inject a hyaluronic acid filler along the circles to create a smooth surface between your cheeks and eyes.
Problem: Not-So-Cute Brown Spots
When your childhood freckles morph from a sweet sprinkling across the nose to uneven tan splotches, you’ve got sun-induced hyper-pigmentation. Commonly, one of the first signs of aging is sunspots on the face, back of hands, and chest. Especially if you play golf or tennis, or often wear V-necks or tank tops.
· Baby-Step Solution: Anyone who has come home from the beach sporting a splash of new freckles knows that sunscreen is most crucial to people prone to sunspots. The sun exacerbates the pigmentation immediately. Layer on protection any chance you get vitamin C serum under daily sunscreen and topped with mineral powder is a sweet trio. At night, help the fade with alpha hydroxy, beta hydroxy, or kojic acid.
· Serious Fix: Ask your derm about mild acid peels to increase cell turnover and get rid of blotchy surface skin, or Intense Pulsed Light treatments, which target spots but are gentler than zappy lasers.
Problem: Perma-lines
When a teenager raises her eyebrows, horizontal lines appear across her forehead, but then disappear immediately when she relaxes the muscles. As she heads into her early 30s, it takes increasingly more time for the lines to disappear. The same thing happens in between the eyebrows and in the lines that go from the outside of the nose down to the corners of the mouth (from years of smiling and taking-but don’t stop doing those). Expression lines result from a combo of UV damage and the skin’s elastin wearing from repetitive use.
· Baby-Step Solution: At home, use vitamin A derivatives like over-the-counter retinol or prescription retinoids like Retin-A Micro to prevent and minimise fine lines by increasing collagen, grassroots solution is this: “Retraining ourselves to not make some very basic facial expressions like scowling can make all the difference. Whenever you feel tense, consciously take a moment to breathe deeply, which will force you to relax your facial muscles.
· Serious Fix: The only way to stop expression lines from forming is to refrain from making the expression, which requires Botox. But derms are divided over using preventive Botox.
Problem: Pores of Plenty
Before you get true wrinkles, you might notice your skin starting to look blah because your pores are getting bigger. Pores sag because of UV damage – the collagen walls start to crumble. Make-up, pollution, and your skin’s natural oil can stretch out your pores over the years beyond the point where they can shrink back and, according to Gross, folks with oily skin are even more prone to stretched pores because their skin produces more… gunk.
· Baby-Step Solution: Clean out and tighten your pores so they can’t hold as much. Peptide creams and serums strengthen and firm the skin, salicylic acid products dissolve the oil in your pores, and face scrubs with round beads smooth away surface dullness – just steer clear of scrubs that contain ground seeds or pits because jagged edges can microscopically tear skin, making the problem worse in the long run.

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