Archive for March 8th, 2010
Thinking About Becoming A Beauty Consultant?
Are you looking for a new job or a change of career? If you are, do you regularly find yourself examining the latest fashion and beauty trends? Do you regularly find yourself giving beauty advice, even unasked advice, to those that you know? If you do, have you ever thought about working as beauty advisor? If you haven’t, you may want to do so, as a beauty consultant can be a nice, fun, and relatively easy way to make money.
Speaking of making money as a beauty advisor, there are many individuals out there who wonder if it is really possible to make money. If you work as beauty consultant, there is a good chance that you will likely end up starting your own small business. While it is always risky and sometimes tricky getting your own small business up and running, it is more than possible for you to make money as a beauty advisor. If you would like more information on how you can go about doing so, you may want to continue reading on.
Information On Vitamin C Skin Care
Ascorbic acid is often regarded as a wrinkle fighter or an anti-aging agent. The main objective of ‘Vitamin C skin care’, in scientific terms, is to increase the synthesis of collagen (a structural protein that is found in skin). The additional benefit of ‘Vitamin C skin care’ is related to its capability of countering free radicals which cause damage to the skin.
Vitamin C skin care, however, faces a major challenge today. This is related to the oxidation tendency of Vitamin C skin care products. On coming in contact with any oxidizing agent (e.g. air), the Vitamin C in the Vitamin C skin care products, gets oxidized; thus making the Vitamin C skin care product useless (in fact counter-effective). The oxidized Ascorbic acid imparts a yellowish-brown color to the Vitamin C skin care product. This is something that you need to check before buying a Ascorbic acid skin care product. Even after you buy a Vitamin C skin care product, you need to store it properly and keep checking that it’s still good to use (i.e. it hasn’t attained a yellowish-brown texture).