Benefits of a Cucumber Face Mask and How to Make One
Benefits of a Cucumber Face Mask and How to Make One
They’re delicious as a healthy snack or in a salad, but you don’t have to eat cucumbers to reap their benefits. This nourishing veggie is also a great way to treat your skin.
Cucumbers have anti-inflammatory properties, plus they’re loaded with antioxidants and nutrients like vitamin C and folic acid, making them an excellent ingredient for a DIY face mask.
In this article we’ll take a closer look at how cucumbers can benefit your skin and, if you want to know how to make a homemade cucumber face mask, we have some recipes to share with you, too.
It’s easy to spend big bucks on products that promise to improve the texture, tone, and overall appearance of your skin. While some of them may deliver, you don’t necessarily have to part with a lot of cash to get a healthy, glowing complexion.
Of course, good genes help. But, sometimes it’s also a matter of using simple, nourishing ingredients that have the ability to boost the health of your skin in a variety of ways.
Packed with vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients, cucumbers are one of those natural ingredients that may help benefit your skin on several fronts. Here’s a look at some of those benefits.
1. Reduces swelling and puffiness
Chilled cucumber slices or cucumber juice can help lessen puffiness while at the same time “waking up” tired-looking skin.
2. Aids acne-prone skin
Oily skin and dead skin cells can clog pores and trigger acne breakouts. Cucumbers — which are mildly astringent — may help to cleanse the skin and tighten pores. This may help reduce breakouts.
3. Helps combat premature aging
According to a
Additionally, cucumbers contain both vitamin C and folic acid. Vitamin C has the ability to stimulate new cell growth, while folic acid aids in fighting off environmental toxins that can make your skin look tired or prematurely aged. Combined, these components may help your skin look firmer and healthier.
4. Soothes irritation
The cooling and anti-inflammatory effect of cucumbers may help ease pain, redness, and irritation caused by sunburns, insect bites, and rashes.
5. Provides a base for hydration
Making your own cucumber face mask doesn’t take much time, and it’s pretty easy. To get started, you’ll need the following:
- 1 cucumber
- mixing bowl
- mixing spoon
- measuring spoons
- blender or food processor
- strainer
Keep in mind that specific recipes may call for other ingredients too, such as aloe vera, oatmeal, or honey.
Here are 3 options for DIY cucumber face masks, starting with the most basic recipe:
1. Basic cucumber face mask
This recipe may be a good option if you’re looking for a quick and easy way to refresh or rejuvenate your skin.
- Blend or puree half an unpeeled cucumber in a blender or food processor until it’s the consistency of a watery paste.
- Separate the juice from any solid bits by pouring the mixture through a strainer.
- Apply the cucumber juice to your freshly washed face. Let the mask sit on your skin for 15 minutes.
- Wash the mask off with cool or lukewarm water and pat your face dry with a soft cloth.
2. Cucumber and aloe vera face mask
This mask may be especially beneficial if you have dry skin, due to the aloe vera that can boost hydration.
- Blend or puree half an unpeeled cucumber in a blender or food processor until it’s the consistency of a watery paste.
- Separate the juice from any solid bits by pouring the mixture through a strainer.
- Add 2 tablespoons of aloe vera gel to the mixture. Blend until smooth.
- Apply the mask to your face and massage gently. Let the mask sit on your skin for 15 minutes.
- Rinse the mask off using cool water. Pat your face dry with a soft cloth.
3. Cucumber, oatmeal, and honey face mask
This recipe may be a good option for acne-prone skin. Together with cucumber’s astringent properties, oatmeal can help exfoliate and remove dead skin cells, while honey can work to balance the bacteria on your skin.
- Blend or puree half an unpeeled cucumber in a blender or food processor until it’s the consistency of a watery paste.
- Separate the juice from any solid bits by pouring the mixture through a strainer.
- Add 1 tablespoon of oatmeal to the mixture. Stir the oatmeal and cucumber juice until smooth.
- Add 1 tablespoon of honey to the mixture and stir until well blended.
- Apply the mixture over your face and neck, and massage gently with your fingertips. Let the mask sit on your skin for 15 minutes.
- Rinse the mask off with lukewarm water. Pat your face dry with a soft cloth.
For best results, always thoroughly cleanse your skin before applying a mask and be sure that you’ve removed all makeup.
When applying a cucumber face mask, gently massage the mask into your skin in small circular motions. This helps the ingredients to penetrate your pores. It also stimulates blood flow on the surface of your skin.
Allow the mask to sit on your skin for 10 to 15 minutes, then rinse off with lukewarm or cold water. Don’t use hot water. This can irritate and dry out your skin.
Don’t use a face mask more than two or three times a week. Overuse can irritate your skin or disrupt the natural balance of oils.
You may have read suggestions that pure cucumber is a miracle product, but so far, most research has only been performed in controlled labs and on cells or mice.
In those cases, researchers also apply cucumber extract — a more concentrated form — and not plain cucumber.
Here are some things plain cucumber can’t do for your skin:
- Whiten your skin: There are no studies that show that cucumber can help to lighten or whiten skin. Lightening dark spots happens with dead cell turnover (exfoliation), and production of new skin cells.
- Hydrate your skin: Water alone is never a sufficient moisturizer, and the same goes for cucumbers. For any DIY cucumber treatment, it’s important that you follow up that step with a hydrating moisturizer. In fact, researchers found that a cucumber formula without moisturizer resulted in decreased hydration.
- Give your skin enough vitamins: While cucumbers do contain vitamins C, K, and B as well as antioxidants, given that cucumbers are 96 percent water, the chances of receiving high enough doses of these vitamins for serious skin concerns is questionable at best.
Chances are you’ll need way more cucumbers than we normally have left over from making a salad to get a verified skin boost. And if your beauty is about being sustainable, clean, and green, eating cucumbers and sticking to store-bought might be your best bet.
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