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Your skin type: Dry skin

Your skin type is: Dry skin

Dry skin is also known as oily-dry skin or sebostasis. It also belongs to the category of problem, sensitive or delicate skin. Your skin produces too little sebum. A greatly reduced sebum production makes the protective hydrolipidic film of your skin unstable, as the water-binding property of sebum is missing. Dry skin often has fine pores, is thin, flaky and sometimes rough. Dry skin needs rich care to compensate for the lack of sebum.

Merkmale trockener Haut

  • stellenweise leicht schuppig
  • sichtbar rau und fleckig (manchmal sieht die Haut vorzeitig gealtert aus)
  • Spannungsgefühl, eventuell auch Juckreiz

Trockene Haut reagiert schneller mit Irritationen und Rötungen, auch das Infektionsrisiko ist höher.

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Oily skin

Oily skin tends to produce more sebum and sweat, which makes it shiny and coarse-pored. Unwanted blackheads often form, which can unfortunately also develop into acne.

Dry skin

Dry skin is also referred to as a low-fat-dry condition or sebostasis. It is also usually categorized as problem, sensitive or delicate skin. Your skin produces too little sebum.

Sensitive skin

The main symptoms of sensitive skin include redness, flaking, itching, burning and tightness. Sensitive skin can also quickly lead to rashes with pustules, papules or swelling.

Combination skin

It is typical for combination skin that some areas show symptoms of dry skin and other areas show symptoms of oily skin. In most cases, the forehead, nose and chin (called the T-zone) are shiny and oily, possibly even blemished, while the cheeks are dry, dull and flaky.

Mature skin

Everyone develops mature skin in the course of their life. Some earlier, some later. When your skin starts to show the first signs of ageing depends on many different factors

Blemished skin

Blemished skin tends to develop blackheads, so-called comedones, which sometimes form inflamed, small reddish pustules. Blemished skin is most common in adolescents from puberty onwards, but can also recur throughout life.

Normal skin

The term "normal" is generally used for a balanced complexion. The T-zone (forehead, nose and chin) can be slightly oily, but the sebum and moisture levels are balanced and the skin is neither too oily nor too dry.