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Improve your skin quality with bath salts


When stocking up on skincare products and toiletries in anticipation of a harsh summer, the one item we give a royal snub is bath salt. Despite coming in pretty packages, loaded with fancy ingredients, and giving off a sweet scent, we walk past the bath salt display rack at a cosmetic shop and proceed to fetch our facial gels and body creams. Blame it on its pretentious price tag or the popular perception relegating these glittering bathing crystals to the smooth atmosphere of a spa, we have never really explored beyond its expensive packaging. The benefits of bath salt are many, and go beyond mere exfoliating dead cells to make skin soft and supple. A nice long soak in a tub sprinkled with bath salt releases muscle tension and improves common irritations such as insect bites, minor rashes, calluses on feet, while working on serious skin conditions like athlete's foot, eczema, and psoriasis. Just as we cannot do without a sunscreen lotion in summer, a jar of bath salt can be as indispensable if you've caught a bad tan or suffer pigmentation of skin. How to pick your bath salt Always ensure the bath salt is crystalline not lumpy, and contain all natural ingredients and nutrients. One can even enhance the benefits of bath salt by infusing it with essential oils such as lavender. Popular summer bath salts Orange: It has a fresh, sweet, citrus smell, and helps soothe dry, irritated skin as well as acne-prone skin. Excellent for rubbing on calluses on the feet. Lavender: Eases nervous tension, relieves pain, disinfects scalp and skin, enhances blood circulation and treats respiratory problems. The benefits of lavender can be attributed to its antiseptic and antifungal properties, hence the best scent to treat skin disorders including wounds and sunburns. Lemongrass: Bathing in water infused with lemongrass bath salts revitalises the body and relieves symptoms of jetlag, clears headache, and busts stress. Summer benefits of bath salt We wonder if there is anything seasonal about using bath salt. In summer, our body tends to become toxic, more acidic and dehydrated, and consistent use of bath salt can boost immunity and cleanse toxins from the body. Twice a week is good frequency. Bath salt as a beauty product It is perhaps the most luxurious and feminine beauty product ever known to women as it has both beautifying and therapeutic properties. And soaking up in a tub infused with bath salt is not the only way to reap its benefits. You can also gently rub bath salt over feet, knees, or elbows, with a damp washcloth. Exfoliation should be completed, and exfoliated areas should be rinsed thoroughly, before taking a bath. Homemade bath salt recipe Fret not if you do not have a large set up with a bathtub, or find them too expensive to be bought off the shelf. Bath salts can be made at home and even be added to a bucket of water and allowed to dissolve for five minutes before taking a bath. Here is a classic recipe to make our own bath salt for a spa-like experience at home. Lavender aromatherapy bath salt Ingredients: 4 cups Epsom salts 1 cup Celtic Sea Salt (course ground) 5 drops red food colouring 5 drops blue food colouring 30 to 40 drops lavender essential oil (aromatherapy oil) 1 cup baking soda 3 Tablespoons dried lavender blossoms Dead Sea salts would also be great, or any other quality sea salt. Do not use table salt, as it does not contain all of the beneficial minerals that sea salts have. Method: 1. Take out a large metal or glass bowl (plastic and wood are too porous, and would absorb the scent of the essential oil), and a metal spoon (again, no wood or plastic). Pour in the Epsom salts and sea salts and mix well. 2. Let the five drops of red and five of blue food colouring fall spread across the surface of the salt mixture. Then do the same with the drops of lavender essential oil. Mix thoroughly. This can take a lot of stirring, since the food colouring and essential oils tend to clump together. Once there are no longer any clumps of food colouring you can generally count on the essential oils being well-mixed too. 3. Now add the cup of baking soda and mix well. The baking soda needs to be added last, because it works much better if the essential oils and food colourings are spread thin first (they would clump much worse if added to a mix with baking soda in it). 4. Finally, mix in the dried lavender blossoms. These are added last so that all of the mixing doesn't beat them up too much. 5. Store the bath salt mixture in an air-tight glass or metal container. Next time you have difficulty falling asleep at night, or are not able to get past work-related stress, you know exactly what to do.

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