Minimalist Beauty

We are constantly being bombarded with products that we “need” in order to lift, tighten, smooth, moisturize, hydrate. A new study shows that the average woman’s beauty routine takes 40 minutes and has 27 steps. Seriously, 27 STEPS!!! In 2006, it was only 17 minutes. Who has time for this? Who has the money for this? This is absolutely absurd and a perfect example of how effective marketing is. Maybe it is time to take a (or 15 or so) steps back and consider a minimalist beauty routine.

One of the best ways to create an ethical beauty routine is to create a minimalist beauty routine. By scaling back the number of products that we use, we can significantly reduce our environmental impact, not to mention give ourselves a little extra time, a little extra money, and a little less stress.

What Is Minimalist Beauty?

Minimalist beauty is conscious living through our skincare, hair care, and makeup routines. It is finding a bit of peace with what we were born with. It is working with our natural beauty, rather than fighting it.

Minimalist beauty can be anything from finding a long-term solution for our most pressing skincare problems, recognizing that beauty is as much about what we eat as it is about what we put on our bodies.

Ultimately, minimalist beauty is uncomplicated.
It is a simple beauty routine that feels good, looks good, and does good.
Minimalist beauty frees up time in the morning and evening.

Minimalist beauty finds what works and sticks with it. It minimizes overconsumption of beauty products and the clutter associated with it.

Minimalist beauty is about finding single products that do many things, and do it well. It is about simplifying what we put on our skin and hair to ingredients we can pronounce, understand, and potentially can eat. It is about using tools instead of products.

Minimalist beauty is not just about minimizing the number of products and steps in our beauty routines. It is also about minimizing the number of ingredients in our products to fewer, more effective products, and minimizing the packaging our products come in.

It is about staying hydrating, moving our bodies, reducing stress, eating well, and taking care of ourselves inside and out.

It is about finding simple products that work well and do it all, with simple, effective ingredients.

Minimalist beauty is about spending less on higher quality, more ethical products that work better, and enjoying them more.

What Minimalist Beauty Isn’t

Minimalist beauty doesn’t have to be a bare bones, no makeup look.

It can be a simplified, more effective, more beautiful version of what you are already doing.

Minimalist beauty doesn’t mean that you need to dump everything, just simplify what you use to the most effective and meaningful products. Instead of multiple things that do one thing each, it means finding things that can do double duty.

It doesn’t mean that you need to try to go for the “no makeup” look, although you can if you want. Keep the bold lips, keep the cat eyes. Do what makes you feel good, just try to use fewer, better products in doing so.

Fewer Products

I’ve talked about simplicity in beauty before. How, often times, we need additional products because one of our products creates a new problem. Our shampoo is over-drying, so we need an anti-frizz serum. Our face wash strips us of our natural oils, so we break out. We now need a spot treatment.

What if, instead of overcompensating, we found products that were a little gentler, that didn’t strip or over-dry. If we found products that just worked, without over doing it?

Yes, I know, it takes a little work, a bit of trial and error. But, in the end, a simpler, more effective product is always better than several products that are there just so solve a problem the previous product created.

Fewer Ingredients

At the heart of minimalist beauty is finding products with simple, effective ingredients. The fewer ingredients, the better. They should not include fillers and fragrances.

Find multi-purpose items (like this RMS Beauty lip stain for lips and cheeks, Cocokind’s Golden Elixer for skin and hair, Bentonite clay for so many things) that easily do two or more things.

Think Pure

Just like your diet, skincare should be pure, as close to natural as possible, and completely nourishing. It should be without synthetics.

Ingredients At Home?

Along the lines of thinking pure is considering kitchen (and therefore edible and safe) ingredients for skincare and beauty.

Coconut oil (the only body oil and makeup remover I use), baking soda (an exfoliant, toothpaste, and a pre-shampoo bar staple), apple cider vinegar (hair rinse, toner) are all beauty powerhouses. I love essential oils, but know they can aggravate some. These can be found in most kitchens and are single ingredient, inexpensive beauty products.

Lifestyle

One minimalist way to clearer skin and shinier hair is to clean up our lifestyle. Getting enough sleep, drinking enough water, reducing stress, and eating right are all incredible ways to look better without a single product.

There is almost no product that can remove or hide the damage that a damaging lifestyle can do. No cream that will fix an all-nighter’s bags, no moisturizer that will hide internal dehydration, no anti-blemish cream that will completely get rid of stress-induced acne.

Realistic Routines

Some of us are beauty maximalists. We buy products, spend an hour or so getting ready in the morning and quite a bit of time at night as well. We honor our self-care days with intricate weekly beauty regimens.

Most of us don’t.

Most of us buy a product or two, use it a few times, and then forget that it exists for weeks at a time. And then, use it again, forget… etc. until it has expired. No judgement here, I was absolutely guilty of this not that long ago. I completely understand the allure of a new mask or serum.

But, we don’t need all of that and we don’t usually use it all.

We need to clean, moisturize, and protect our skin. Seriously, that is all we need. Everything else is a bonus.

A serum, toner, weekly exfoliant and mask, and night cream are additions that can help but aren’t necessary.

A Few Quick Tips to Minimalist Beauty

Aside from reducing what you use, consider a few product alternatives:

Instead of:

Anti-cellulite cream: try coconut oil combined with dry brushing (which also feels incredibly amazing and energizing in the morning).

Blow drying for a long time: Try a microfiber wrap. Leave it on for fifteen or twenty minutes while you eat breakfast and get dressed, then style. Most of the moisture will be gone, reducing your blow-dry time (and your need for a heat-styling protectant).

Daily shampoo: Wash and style your hair less frequently with a good dry shampoo. Either buy one or DIY your own, and immediately cut down on many of your hair products and time spent styling.

Eliminate Fragrance: Fragrance is quite possibly the biggest toxic offender when it comes to beauty. Try an essential oil or just nothing at all instead. Please. For your own health (and that of others) do this.

In addition to reducing your environmental footprint, freeing up a few minutes each morning, and looking better, consider the additional benefit of a minimalist beauty routine. You may feel more mindful, more in tune with your skin (and therefore your health) and less flustered and rushed in the morning. And all of this may reduce some of your stress… which of course will help you to look and feel just a little bit better. Maybe minimalist beauty is the way to go?

If you’d like to turn your minimalist beauty routine into a zero-waste beauty routine, take a look here.

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Author: Jessica

founder, Future:Standard, an ethical lifestyle site.

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