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Water Therapy For Your Skin

Although not quite the same as using fresh-collected rainwater, water therapy is nonetheless effective in replenishing thirsty skin. Clever use of mineral water will give your skin a real home cure.

Thermal springs in a bottle
Hard, calcareous water is bad for the skin. If you have sensitive or easily irritated skin you should resort to nature for your daily skin care. Ranges of thermal and mineral waters contain trace elements, although each water has different properties.
Natural benefits are intensified, some-times by as much as ten times, by the cosmetic additives in thermal water. Once you accept that hydration is one of the skin's most basic needs, it should no longer seem an extravagance to give yourself a home spa.

Good use of water therapy
The best way to retain water in the cutaneous tissues remains the application of a water-therapy treatment directly onto the skin. There are numerous formulas available and they have been produced with the express purpose of aiding the cell renewal of body and skin. Apply as you would an ordinary spray atomizer to cleanse or simply refresh the face; finally blotting with a paper tissue. This will leave a protective film on the skin and a feeling of total comfort. Used in the evening as a relaxant or in the morning as a toner, water therapy is a friend to your skin.


Some Facts about Water Therapy
  • Thermal water treatments enliven the complexion.
  • Water therapy also contains hydrating agents that help to counteract dryness.
  • The composition of thermal waters is very close to the skin's own.



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