cross-posted from: https://linux.community/post/1079125

I’ve started sunbathing because reasons.

second day: I applied sunscreen to my skin and after some 30 seconds of rubbing my arms, I started to see what I could be dead skin on my hands: tiny balls of grey and white junk, the size of one to several sand grains, but not hard to press like sand or a tiny particle of wood.

The other thing that crossed my mind is it could be rests of the chemical sunscreen I use. Has this ever happened to you with chemical screens?

Is this normal?

  • hedgehogging_the_bed
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    4 months ago
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    In skincare discussions what you experienced is called “pilling” and it’s the result of putting on a lotion or skin product too soon after another one that was applied too thickly or didn’t have time to absorb fully. The balls are dead skin and the dried lotion or sunscreen that has gotten gummy and stuck to itself like eraser bits. Apply your sunscreen a little bit thinner and rub it in well and it shouldn’t continue to happen.

    • Eheran
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      4 months ago
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      I can do the same after simply letting my skin soak in water for a few minutes at some points like in the foot arch.

      On a side note, does lotion actually “soak in” in meaningful amounts? Wasn’t that a myth/sales pitch?

      • hedgehogging_the_bed
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        4 months ago
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        If you soaked your skin then that is just dead skin cells. Pilling happens on dry skin.

        Lotion is composed of a water part that gets absorbed or evaporated and a fat or wax part that only absorbs into the very top layer of dead cells.

  • boogetyboo
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    4 months ago
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    If your shower routine is standing under water and just washing your stinky bits, chances are your body is still covered in sun screen. That stuff is designed to stay on in water. You need to properly wash yourself all over with soap/body wash and use a loofah. That will remove the sunscreen and also exfoliate dead skin.

    Source: Australian

    • edricEnglish
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      4 months ago
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      This is what I hate with sunscreen. It’s so hard to wash off and the smell lingers. I just avoid the sun instead. lol

      • Che Banana
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        4 months ago
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        In the US (SoCal) the dryer climates I needed a daily lotion and boy did Lubriderm dona good job with A) daily use B)unscented C)non greasy D)SPF 15 E)affordable.

        Here, in EU the shit is 3x the price with zero SPF lotion here is crazy expensive ot absolute garbage

  • SnokenKeekaGuard
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    4 months ago
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    I’m assuming it has to do with your sunscreen and any other product you applied.