Amazon has 1.7oz Cetaphil Sheer Mineral Liquid Sunscreen Broad Spectrum SPF 50 Sunscreen on sale for $7.57 when you checkout with Subscribe and Save. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $25+ orders.
Thanks to Slickdeals Deal Hunter PennyFound for posting this deal.
Note: You may cancel Subscribe & Save any time after your order ships.
Amazon.com[amazon.com] has 1.7-OzCetaphil Sheer 100% Mineral Liquid SPF 50 Sunscreen w/ Zinc Broad Spectrum for $7.97 - 5% when you checkout with Subscribe & Save = $7.57. Shipping is freew/ Prime or on $25+.
About this deal
My research indicates that this is $4.42 lower (36% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting at $11.99 at the time of this posting.
Model: Cetaphil Sheer Mineral Liquid Sunscreen for Face - SPF 50 - 1.7 fl oz
Deal History
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Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
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I stopped wearing sunscreen five years ago on intuition and began to develop a tan. This was surprising to me as I had never taned before as a very fair skinned redhead. I would later learn that it is avoidance of sun that causes skin damage from unbalanced wavelength exposure. Early morning sun is mostly redlight and a little blue. Blue light and purple alone are damaging but they are never alone in nature as the red light is supposed to counterbalane any negatives of other wavelengths. Look into solar callus, your natural sunscreen, free from nature (the early sun).
I stopped wearing sunscreen five years ago on intuition and began to develop a tan. This was surprising to me as I had never taned before as a very fair skinned redhead. I would later learn that it is avoidance of sun that causes skin damage from unbalanced wavelength exposure. Early morning sun is mostly redlight and a little blue. Blue light and purple alone are damaging but they are never alone in nature as the red light is supposed to counterbalane any negatives of other wavelengths. Look into solar callus, your natural sunscreen, free from nature (the early sun).
That's been my strategy too. Limit time in sun, wear protective clothes/hat, use shade when possible. 15-30 minutes/day will develop your natural tan.
I stopped wearing sunscreen five years ago on intuition and began to develop a tan. This was surprising to me as I had never taned before as a very fair skinned redhead. I would later learn that it is avoidance of sun that causes skin damage from unbalanced wavelength exposure. Early morning sun is mostly redlight and a little blue. Blue light and purple alone are damaging but they are never alone in nature as the red light is supposed to counterbalane any negatives of other wavelengths. Look into solar callus, your natural sunscreen, free from nature (the early sun).
That is just bad information:
Sun Tan
What it is:
There is no such thing as a safe tan. The increase in skin pigment, called melanin, which causes the tan color change in your skin is a sign of damage.
Why it happens:
Once skin is exposed to UV radiation, it increases the production of melanin in an attempt to protect the skin from further damage. Melanin is the same pigment that colors your hair, eyes, and skin. The increase in melanin may cause your skin tone to darken over the next 48 hours.
Symptoms:
Skin tones that are capable of developing a tan, typically skin types II through V, will probably darken in tone within two days.
The Bottom Line:
Evidence suggests that tanning greatly increases your risk of developing skin cancer. And, contrary to popular belief, getting a tan will not protect your skin from sunburn or other skin damage. The extra melanin in tanned skin provides a Sun Protection Factor (SPF) of about 2 to 4; far below the minimum recommended SPF of 15.
FDA
Reconsider what you are doing. In my family, Multiple family members have had skin cancer, thankfully it was detected and removed because they saw a dermatologist once a year. Take care.
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https://www.webmd.com/skin-proble...-chemicals
Also, never use a sunscreen that doesn't have "broad spectrum". This word basically means it will cover both uva and uvb rays.
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Edit: Ah it's a zinc compound. There is no such thing as a sheer zinc sunscreen. I'm not interested in a ghost face.
https://www.ewg.org/sunscreen/abo...2C_SPF_50/
Thanks for this resourceful link
Neutrogena was on the top of the list. Might want to check if your product contains these ingredients.
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Sun Tan
What it is:
There is no such thing as a safe tan. The increase in skin pigment, called melanin, which causes the tan color change in your skin is a sign of damage.
Why it happens:
Once skin is exposed to UV radiation, it increases the production of melanin in an attempt to protect the skin from further damage. Melanin is the same pigment that colors your hair, eyes, and skin. The increase in melanin may cause your skin tone to darken over the next 48 hours.
Symptoms:
Skin tones that are capable of developing a tan, typically skin types II through V, will probably darken in tone within two days.
The Bottom Line:
Evidence suggests that tanning greatly increases your risk of developing skin cancer. And, contrary to popular belief, getting a tan will not protect your skin from sunburn or other skin damage. The extra melanin in tanned skin provides a Sun Protection Factor (SPF) of about 2 to 4; far below the minimum recommended SPF of 15.
FDA
Reconsider what you are doing. In my family, Multiple family members have had skin cancer, thankfully it was detected and removed because they saw a dermatologist once a year. Take care.