Up to 90% of visible skin ageing comes from the sun.
The Skin Cancer Foundation has cited this figure for decades. It is not new. What is new is how rarely it changes anyone’s behaviour.
Most women wearing foundation believe they are also wearing sun protection. Most aren’t. The SPF in the average foundation is too low, and applied too sparingly, to count as defence. To reach the protection level on the label, you would need to apply roughly seven times the amount anyone actually does.
So the foundation goes on. The protection does not.
Eight hours. Five days a week. For decades.
Foundation is not occasional. It is something most women apply most mornings and wear until evening. Across a working week, that is forty hours of product on the skin. Across a working life, it is tens of thousands of hours.
What is in those products matters. So does what is not.
The ingredients that earned a place. And the ones that didn’t.
Read the back of most high-street foundations and you will find some combination of isopropyl myristate, heavy silicones, synthetic fragrance, and lanolin. Each is doing a specific job. Spreadability. Slip. Scent. Adhesion. None of them are doing anything for the skin underneath.
Isopropyl myristate
Sits at the top of most comedogenicity scales. A common cause of the “I’ve been breaking out since I started wearing this” complaint.
Synthetic fragrance
A catch-all term that can legally contain dozens of individual compounds. One of the most common triggers for sensitive skin reactions.
Lanolin
A recognised allergen for a measurable share of the population. Still widely used, still rarely flagged on the front of the bottle.
Heavy silicones
Not inherently harmful. Worn for long stretches without thorough cleansing they can trap debris against skin that was otherwise fine.
UVA does not stop for clouds. Or windows.
There are two types of UV that reach the skin. UVB causes burning. UVA causes most of the long-term damage that shows up later as fine lines, pigmentation, and loss of firmness.
UVA is the one that does not care if it is overcast. It is the one that passes through your kitchen window in February. It is the reason dermatologists can identify, at a glance, which side of a person’s face has spent more time near a car window.
The combination matters more than any single piece.
Foundation worn without genuine UV protection. Layered onto skin already vulnerable to photoageing. Built around ingredients chosen for finish rather than function.
None of it is dramatic on its own. The damage is in the repetition. Daily routines do not announce themselves. They accumulate.
What if your foundation actually worked for your skin?
Not “skincare-infused.” Not “with added vitamins.” A complexion product that genuinely protected against UV at the level the label claimed. That actively treated fine lines while you wore it. That gave the coverage of a foundation without any of the trade-offs.
Age-Defy Tinted SPF Perfector.
A foundation, a sunscreen, and a treatment serum in one. Made for women who refuse to choose.