Showing posts with label skincare. Show all posts

Korean beauty products- Facemask edition


What I have used and loved/hated


Living in Korea for so long it was inevitable getting their beauty products, and I have heard about them for a long while now, even before all this craze started. I have had Korean friends that sent me products a long while back and whilst I did not think them amazing at the beginning, I thought they were good. Things have long changed since then, and most of all now I had the freedom of choice.

Living in the UK, it is not as easy to get Korean products here, mostly I would have to buy them online, and to pay £13 for a pack of 10 facemasks, when I could get them in Korea for as little as £6 makes no sense. Thus I bought them once, loved them, cherished them, but never purchased them again. Now, with going to Korea, I got to go crazy- well as crazy as my budget allowed me to go. Before I left home I had it all planned, there was no use to lug beauty products with me when I could buy and experience new ones. I have to admit though I did go with my essentials in tow- I can never go anywhere without my John Frieda Frizzease. My hair does not allow me any other products. The rest of them? Left them home happily.

Now, I will have to say though, Korean products are mostly engineered for their skin, meaning, you can find many products that are good for sensitive, breaking out, dry skin. But since my skin is very close to breakout free and not that sensitive or dry, but rather oily, I found products with much difficulty. Moreover, Koreans tend to use a whole range of products that were very unfamiliar to me. I am talking toner (which I have tried to use before this but my skin does not take lightly to it so I stopped), emulsified cream (which is a lighter version of a full on cream), serum (once again a whole category on its own- much lighter than the emulsion) and cream (here is the trick, their creams are thick! Unless you get a watery based one such as cucumber, green tea- mostly creams for oily skin). And they use them all. In one go.  As much as I love using face products, there is a limit to it, and my skin is not as thirsty. Thus, too many products make me feel like I tried to drown my face in oil, which make it produce more oil, which make me breakout.

So I stopped with only face washes, facemasks, cream, and the occasional use of samples, because lord knows when you go into a beauty store in Korea you buy two products and leave with a houseful of samples-I am not complaining!

As beauty brands go, you have again a variety- from high end ones like Hera (the Nicholas Kirkwood collab was amazing) to not so high end but still pricey like Etude, to decently priced ad good ones like Nature’s skin and itsskin etc. I can’t say I have tried them all, but I have tried a few of them. I will post separate posts on them however. Should be too ashamed to admit I have tried too many for one blog post but I will admit it proudly.

Facemasks


A great brand that I have found for affordable and good facemasks is The Face Shop( Online orders here). They have a variety of facemasks for different types of skins or areas you might have problems in. These are the ones I ordered for a ridiculous amount and loved. You have Green Tea, Kelp face masks for oily skin and clearing up, you have lemon and rice for brightening, you have pomegranate, blueberry for antioxidants, you have cucumber for hydration etc. There is a wide variety to choose from. The only problem is that they sell them in 10s and very rarely can buy individually. Now that wouldn’t be a problem if not for the fact that you get 10s of the same one. If you don’t have a favourite one, it is a bit inconvenient. What if you don’t like the one you got and you still have 9 to go through?


Some other brands that I have liked when it came to facemasks have been a very weird knockoff brand that looks very similar to Soap&Glory products. Faith in Face is a company apparently set up by experts from Canada, Korea and UK. However, it appears to be a brand based in Hong Kong. I could not find it in the UK, I could only find it in Korea and to order from Yesstyle and their own website (here). They are not pricey at all and you can only find them in Korea at a store similar to Sephora (or for UK people Superdrug or Boots) called Olive Young. They have different type of facemasks that are good for exfoliating, cleansing, purifying etc. I have used them the most ad I have to admit they are amazing.

For a more casual type of facemask I would say, ones that once again I have found in that store, Olive Young, Ariul 7 days Mask. (here )


I have to add though, Olive Young sold only foreign products, so technically it is not exactly Korean, but I found it in Korea so it doesn’t count. I have found these products online as well so I will put links to everything I found. However, some of the products, more specifically the very Korean ones I could only find on Amazon, Ebay or Yesstyle for a bit more than I got them.

Another facemask that I have loved is the Shingmulnara mask. It is a brand that is owned by CJ and can only be found in Olive Young. I liked them for the handy packaging and the fact that their masks are ‘portion size’ and clear masks. For me that was a saver on the plane. I used them on my flights to and from Korea. Easy to carry around and to put in a Ziploc bag for security purposes and it being clear it is easy to apply on the plane and leave it in for those 8 dreadful hours and it will leave the skin pampered and refreshed. Of course without getting weird looks from your in-flight neighbours. As I stated in my previous blog post, on long haul flights I enjoy pampering myself and taking care of my skin. Makes the time pass faster plus it is a good way to not feel so Debbie Downer once you land.  


Miscellaneous masks that I have used and decently hated I would have to admit were some of the masks from The Face Shop, before I realised the masks were for different types of skins I have used majority of them, and some for example the overly hydrating ones such as the cucumber ones and the blueberry one my skin hated and broke out the second day. Another one that my skin did not appreciate as much but it fared better than with the previous ones would be the TonyMoly Goat Milk Moisture Mask Sheet. These smelled amazing, I will have to give them that, however my skin did not like them. They are highly moisturising, maybe a tab bit more than my skin needed. My skin felt overwhelmed with all the moisture that it did not know what to do with it and transformed it into shine for at least two days after using the mask. For a natural glowy look those would be amazing, I am more the matte type of girl though.


These would be all the facemasks that I have used and loved/hated. Wished I have tried on more than that, however I cannot load my skin with product or else its response would’ve been more forceful than I was ready to take.

Lox

Road to Korea- 17 hours of madness


Surviving the plane ride



If I could travel without the means we use now to travel, I would. I love traveling. I hate the means though. I despise them, not because I have a fear of it, but because I am not a patient person in all honesty. I hate sitting on my ass for hours on end without being able to move. Not that I would do much but I start feeling a bit claustrophobic, and I feel as if I am wasting time. I do realise how much of a blessing it is sometimes, it is the perfect time for some me time, for some pampering (as I said before facemasks are a must), catching up on lost sleep (and we all know that even after 10 hours of sleeping per night we still have sleep to catch up on), read, write, anything that I couldn’t do at home because of various reasons (eg loud family, people always calling you and wanting to talk to you, life in general etc.). Think that is the only good thing I could say about flying. I have done a lot of that during the past 3-4 years, and I have started getting used to it, now it doesn’t bother me as much. I found the perfect routine and I stick to it every time. Try to either sleep, read, listen to music. Do not forget the hand sanitizer and the hand cream (dry hands are the worst thing in the world). Lip balm. As little make up on as possible- if any at all. Do not drink fizzy drinks or alcohol. Water as much as possible (drink not water the plants). Ask for extra if needed.

Long haul flights are the best when you would like to have some personal time. At the same time, if you are not a patient person (I definitely am not) after 4-5 hours this personal time begins to become a torture. That is when I would usually try to sleep. And that is when everybody else, who’s obviously started sleeping as soon as the plane took off starts waking up. And rattle the back of my seat, and the babies on the plane start crying in hunger, and people start going to the toilet. And my plan to sleep goes straight down the drain. And it’s not like I find it easy to sleep on the plane anyways. It usually takes me ages to fall asleep whilst on the plane. However my mindset does change to ‘time to sleep now’ and the yawning and grouchiness starts. Which makes it more impossible to cope with everything that is going on around me. Then, is when I decide I need to help myself a bit and fall asleep and I would accept the glass of wine that the flight attendant gives me. Not saying that is okay, usually alcohol does not help with dehydration-it usually makes it worse, however, it helps with falling asleep. Not promoting underage drinking here! If underage, alcohol is out of the question.

Skin care? Yes please!


Usually before I would go to sleep I would go on a rampage with my face masks and hydrating products. Before I learned that hydrating on a plane is important for my skin (this might become boring if you’re not interested in your skin’s health) I didn’t bother with anything that had ‘face mask’, ‘hydrating’, ‘cream’ on it. I would just use lip balm because I hate cracked lips. I did not realise that those cracked lips was my body telling me ‘Oi idiot, losing water here!’ I would get off the plane and not feel its effects immediately. I’d be fine usually until the next day, when my skin would start breaking out and kill me with its dryness. Ever since then I started using extra hydrating creams and face masks (usually clear ones) while on the long haul flight. If the plane ride is shorter I’d make sure to hydrate well the night before and apply a face mask. And only apply the extra hydrating cream before the flight and use minimal make up and completely forget about make up while on a long plane ride. (boring part is over)


To the loo? Forget the view


Another tip, would be to never sit on a window seat. Unless you are traveling with friends that you could bother constantly with going to the toilet. Window seats are amazing if you know you have a small bladder and not as many necessities. Or if you know you’ll sleep the entire way. However, if not, window seats are the worst. I happened to sit on a window seat on the flight there and it killed me, especially since I have a small bladder and a lot of toilet necessities. I am a bit of a germ freak especially on the plane, and the hand sanitizer I had and the wet towels they gave us were not doing it for me.

Surviving the jetlag


Arriving in Korea wasn’t as bad as I thought, I had an overnight flight and slept for a bit on the plane (when I could finally fall asleep). Surprisingly, I wasn’t jetlagged at all. I did have to fight with myself for a bit to be honest, to go to bed at 10pm that night, but the excitement and the fact that I had an entire room to clean and luggage to unpack before I knew it, it was 10pm already.

Now, it all depends on the flight and timezones. Some people have difficulties with jetlag, and I read about any and every possible tip I could. Including the ‘do not eat whilst on the plane’ one. And I have to say that whilst I might find it a stupidity, it might actually work. If you have the patience not to eat out of boredom on the plane. Not eating for a while and then eating gets you easier in the time zone. Not to mention the fact that after you eat you do tend to get sleepy. But then, a 17 hour flight, with another 12 until I’d go to bed it was impossible for me. The fact that even if I became sleepy on the plane after I’ve had my meal but no matter how sleepy the food makes me the amount of noise and shuffling around still keeps me awake is another story.
I needn’t worry though, for the jetlag missed me completely every single time. Weirdly enough it did not miss me at all after a 2 hour change in the timezone.


Welcome to Korea



And that was the start of my adventure. After that long plane journey, which in the end became my nemesis and I dread doing it again, my longer placement journey began. And no amount of facemasks or hydration, sanitizer or sleep could have prepared me for it. Well maybe sleep might have helped a bit…


Lox