Guide on achieving model tier skin

I. Skincare
Skincare routine

23232323232323


Facial cleanser
41YuSwjJUIL.jpg

Start the routine by rubbing a cleanser on your face at morning and before bed to clear your skin's pores from all the dirt that gets stuck on it during the day. Be careful to chose products that doesn't contain alcohol as it dries the skin out.

Moisturiser
cerave-moisturizing-lotion2s9.png

After cleaning your skin, use a moisturising lotion on it to keep it hydrated all day. I can highly recommend products from CeraVe and Neutrogena.

SPF cream
zmatnujici-pletovy-krem-na-opalovani-spf-50-dry-touch-sun-care-cream-50-ml_1456411120190418124737.jpg

Always use sun protection cream before leaving your house, especially if you are white (but don't be lazy even if you are not, even the darkest of darkest blacks only have a natural SPF of around 15). Use as high factored as possible, at least 30 (you can use higher factored, more expensive one on your valuable face and cheaper low factored elsewhere on your body to save money). A smart idea is to use a moisturiser lotion that has SPF built into it.

Tretinoin
3553533.JPG

A retinoid sold under the brand name Retin A or Retino among others, it does wonders for acne, skin tightness, wrinkle prevention and collagen production. It comes in different strengths (0.01%, 0.025% and 0.1%). I recommend starting with the weakest one and see it if you need to up the strength. Apply a pea sized amount from the cream and rub it evenly on your skin before going to bed. It increases sensitivity to sun rays, so be sure to apply SPF too.

Chapstick
featured-balm.jpg

Use chapstick on your lips at morning and before bed to keep them hydrated and glowing. Dry, chapped lips look horrible so you should avoid those with this cheap tool.

Exfoliating
image

Once or twice a week take the time to exfoliate after you have cleansed your skin. Rub the exfoliating cream on your skin to remove dead skin, then wash it off with water when you are finished.

Red light lamp
red-light-therapy.jpg

Use a red light lamp once or twice a week for 15 minutes by looking at it with your face from 60-70 cm (use sunglasses to protect your eyes). The wattage doesn't really matter but the wavelength of the light should be around 670nm. It increases blood flow, helps with acne, collagen production, elasticity and improves mitochondrial function.

Help of a professional - visiting a cosmetician or a dermatologist
If you are struggling with severe acne, has blackheads, acne scars or other issues, you should regularly see a cosmetician and get your skin cleaned professionaly, like on a monthly basis. If you have serious skin conditions seek the help of a dermatologist before ordering Accutane from some vendor from the slums of Mumbai just because some autist recommended you to do so on an internet forum.

II. Nutrition
I can recommend you eating as much animal based foods as possible to achieve mogger skin. A thread I made before detailing my diet:
https://looksmax.org/threads/my-diet.421718/

Some key elements in your diet to keep your eye on:

Protein
Eat enough protein to fuel your body as it literally creates everything from breaking the protein down thousands of different amino acids then rebuilding it to make your skin renew itself constantly. Aim for at least 2g / lean body mass kg (1 g / lbs) of animal based protein per day

Fats
Animal fats are essential for keeping your skin healthy and strong. Don't hesitate to eat shitload of saturated fat and cholesterol despite what normies say about them. Don't fall for the fear mongering against PUFAs. Both omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids are essential nutrients which the body can't produce on itself. They are the building blocks of cell membranes and help keep the skin hydrated. What in reality matters is keeping the omega3/6 ratio between 1:1 and 1:4.

Collagen
You should aid your body's natural collagen production by making bone broth or supplementing through hydrolized animal collagen peptides. Beef, fish, pork it doesn't really matter, eat as much as you can afford, the more the better. I personnaly consume 20 g of hydrolized beef collagen peptides a day.

Hyaluronic acid
Helps increase skin moisture and reduce dryness. You should get around 100-200mg daily from supplements.

Vitamin A
Promotes skin health by giving certain amount of protection from sunburn and fighting free radicals as an antioxidant. Don't be affraid to megadose it as it seems to clear the skin in high doses. The best natural source of it is liver, doesn't matter from what animal. For reference just 100g of pork liver has 700% of the RDA of vitamin A, talking about nature's superfoods.

Vitamin C
Ascorbic acid is essential for tissue reparation and collagen formation. It is crucial to keep in mind that due to their molecules being so similar, glucose (sugar) competes in absorption with vitamin C:
D9YbcMOWwAAUilI.jpg

What this means in practical terms is the more carbs you eat, the more vitamin C you need as it greatly hinders it's absorption. You can get away with as low as liver's natural ascorbic acid content (around 40mg / 100g) if you eat carnivorous and avoid carbs but otherwise aim for 2-3 gramms per day if you are following a conventional, carbohydrate based diet.


Vitamin D
Helps the skin from premature aging while also plays an integral role in protection and rejuvenation. The lighter your skin, the easier you can synthetise it from sunlight. White guys can get away even with 15 mins of winter sun but if you are black and live in Europe or other northern places you should definitely supplement it exogenously. Fatty oily fish like mackerel and hering are excellent sources to do so.

Vitamin E
A powerful antioxidant which reduces UV damage coming from the sun and helps fighting the inflammation caused by it. Fish and seafood are a good animal sources of it.

Vitamin K
Helps wounds, bruises, stretch marks and cuts to heal. Brightens dark circles, boosts skin elasticity, reduces the appearance of under eye sagging and wrinkles. You don't really have to worry about it since chances are you already eat enough of it. You want to have the K2 variant tho, found in animal sources (K1, the one found in plant foods has dogshit absorption ratio).

Zinc
Has anti-inflammatory effects which makes it effective against acne.Found in meat in abundance.

Water
Consume at least 4-5 liters of water per day to help keep your skin moisturised.

II. Ideal skintone and darkness
Warm skin undertone
The ideal skin tone for men is warm, glowing and orangeish, as opposed to pale and pinkish, seen on the left:
28329_square.jpg


Beta carotene
dreamstime_m_66770579.jpg

A precursor of vitamin A and a carotene which is naturally found in yellow - orange vegetables giving them their iconic color. It makes your skin undertone yellowish. Good food sources include sweet potatoes, carrots and pumpkins, but you can also get it from tablets. I recommend doing a loading phase for 1-2 weeks intaking 100 000 IUs of beta carotene (vitamin A is fat solluble meaning it gets deposited) daily, then maintenance at 25 - 50 000 IUs / day.

Lycopene
Chemical-structure-and-various-source-of-lycopene.png

Also a carotene, which gives red undertone to your skin and makes it glowing when consumed. Found in tomatoes naturally, but you can also take from tablets. I recommend 20mgs / day. Use in combination with beta carotene to achieve warm orange toned skin.

Myself as an example:
261433165 1045445309583797 4417446252290559134 n

The picture on the left shows my original skintone few years ago during wintertime. The pic on the right was taken just now. I haven't done any tanning lately (and haven't gotten any sun either as it's cold December rn in Europe), only been using carotenoids.


Skin darkness
The ideal skin darkness for men is that of olive, light brown or caramel color. Mulattoes and light skin niggas already have this color so if you are one, congratulations, you have nothing to do in this department. Meeks' coloring is perhaps as good as it gets:
jm-1.jpg


Olive skin, common that of Meds is also very good:
936full-jon-kortajarena.jpg


But Nordic and other white guys can achieve it too with a bit of effort, a good example is Swedish model Arvid Hestner:
7e717e026f461542d6bd9900b2f80fd620899207.jpg


If you are South Asian, Middle Eastern / North African, Latino or South East Asian you should avoid darkening your skin any more, but can use carotenoids regardless for glowing skin.

For white guys the skin darkening methods starting from the best to worst are the following:

a) Melanotan
If you want to (semi) permanently darken your skin without raping your collagen and major negative side effects, Melanotan 1 or 2 is the way to go. You can inject it or use it in the form of a nasal spray if you are afraid of needles. Melanotan is especially recommended for gingers and white guys with extremely light Fitzpatrick 1 skin as it not only darkens the skin itself but also hair follicles, leading to a more masculine pheno.
264621439_4913154318715618_7538207169918509101_n.jpg


b) Self tanner
1-tan-questionable-gosling-big-short-gentleman-journal-664x442-c-center.jpg

A much less effective alternative compared to Melanotan. Self tanning creams and sprays darken your epithelium (the outer layer of the skin), which sheds continously, which means the darkening effect goes away very fast, perhaps as short as a week. The color of it can look very fake (bright yellow / orange) if you buy a shitty product, making you a laughning stock. Remove facial & body hair and exfoliate before using a self tanner to prevent uneven spots. Pros of it include saving your collagen and working fast (it darkens you in a few hours).

c) Tanning bed
51312cdcae7e5.image.jpg

Tanning beds give the most natural tan and the effect is instant but that's where their list of pros end. Other than that the UV rays coming from the machines are horrible for your skin, leading to wrinkles over long term and lost of collagen plus they are pricy to use too. Only use one if you need to get a tan as soon as possible and have no other option otherwise.

III. Facial & body hair removal
Non permanent hair removal

a) Epilating
520029-ek647.png

By far the best non permanent hair removal method. Originally women use it as it provides 2-6 weeks of baby smooth skin after one session, but don't let this fool you, if anything it makes more sense for men to use it despite your average normie calling this method faggot. The only downside of it is that it's painful as fuck for the first sessions as the machine works by tearing your hair follicles out of your skin, one by one (it doesn't cause any skin irriation tho). I recommend to use it in the shower with shower cream as the added lotion prevents pain.

b) Waxing
mh-chest-wax-1533759591.png

Works the same way as an epilator does, by removing your hair follicles altogether. A bit less painful than epilating, but it's much more expensive on the long run since it's not a one time purchase, you will have to keep buying waxing tapes or go to a professional.

c) Shaving
By far the shittiest method to remove facial &body hair as it only does so with the part above your skin, which means you will constantly have to shave every few days.
Something like a Philips Bodygroom Series body hair removal device provides fast, painless altough half assed results:
back-body-groom.jpg


If you don't posses any of those for whatever reaso, at least use a safety razor instead of cartridge (as it's a lot cheaper and the single blade means less skin irriation). Be sure to use a non alcoholic aftershave balm afterwards.
bevel-1577744148.jpg


Permanent hair removal

a) Electrolysis
needle.jpg

The most effective yet by far the most expensive and time consuming permanent hair removal method, which works on all skin tones, on all body parts. It removes hair one by one by destroying their growth center with heat. After a very fine probe is inserted into the hair follicle and the hair is removed with tweezers.

b) Laser hair removal
IMG_9540-e1568704982503.jpg

Laser treatment affects hair in the active growth phase (anagen stage). The laser beam is made up of precisely controlled pulses of energy which are absorbed by the melanin or pigment in the hair, reaching into the active hair follicles that lie beneath the skin. Essentially, the energy heats the hair – right down to the bottom of the root – safely destroying it without damaging surrounding tissue or skin. Most people will need a course of between six and eight sessions, after which time the hair will be visibly reduced or permanently removed and the skin will appear smooth and even. Cheaper than electrolysis and each session is only like half an hour.

c) Intense Pulsed Light (IPL)
Can-You-Get-Laser-Hair-Removal-on-Your-Face.jpg

In contrast to laser hair removal it uses a broad spectrum of light with multiple wavelengths. This means it has more unfocused energy around the hair and skin area.” So, IPL uses multi-spectrum lights whereas laser use single spectrum light, “meaning IPL energy is scattered and much weaker. Laser has a densified light, and all energy is focused on this single light. Spectrum lights are measured as wavelength (nm), for example, 755nm wavelength means this spectrum light can penetrate 755nm deep beneath the skin. 755nm wavelength light is best attracted to melanin, so it is best used for hair removal. 532nm means light can reach up to 532nm beneath the skin.

When used for hair removal specifically, IPL usually requires six to eight treatments to see a complete removal of hair in an area. This is dependent, however, on the person's skin colour, hair colour and also the thickness of the hair. IPL technology works best on very light skin combined with dark hair (vampire pheno):
26e5fb277022cbe94be2f86f65ef6488.jpg


IPL is by far the least effective out of the permanent hair removal methods but it's the cheapest and most avaible one as you can buy your own IPL device yourself and do it at home if you want to.
1582217354-philips-lumea-prestige-bri954-crop-1582217320.jpg

IV. Makeup for men
Blemish Balm (BB)
81ytonue+JL._SL1500_.jpg

BB is like a a skin tone tinted moisturiser with extra benefits. These multitasking products can correct redness and discolouration, conceal spots and scars, smooth fine lines and wrinkles, brighten and moisturise, and protect with sun protection filters. They’re practical too, and easier to carry around than the combined products they can sub for: moisturiser, sun screen, concealer. Basically, BBs are a lighter, more man-friendly version of foundation. Make sure to choose one that fits your natural skin tone as close as possible.

Concealer
maxresdefault.jpg

3c3e9f54fafa1424fc5aa10f44558184.jpg



Helps cover dark circles, blemishes, scars, and other imperfections of the face. Using your (clean) finger, take a little bit of concealer from the pot and dot onto any areas you'd like to cover. Remember, a little goes a long way and you can always add more if needed. Using your finger or a slightly damp Face Sponge, blend the concealer by tapping it lightly until it's completely blended in. When blending concealer in, tap the product in rather than dragging it. Use your fourth finger for the lightest touch. Also take care to smooth out any concealer sitting in creases under the eyes. As with BB cream, try to purchase one that fits your skin color.

Contouring
hqdefault.jpg


Personally I haven't tried it, but I am aware of the fact the along with a shitton of filters and digital photo manipulation, prettyboys and models on social media use contouring all the time in order for their face to look more angular and chiselled using different shades of products. Do it at your own will, I personally wouldn't risk getting caught with it irl as my cheeks are decent as they are. I would consider using it when taking photos to post on social media tho.

Regardless of what makeup products you use don't forget to wash it off before going to bed as leaving stuff on your face can lead to irriation and acne breakouts if not careful.


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I. Skincare
Skincare routine

View attachment 1437245

Facial cleanser
41YuSwjJUIL.jpg

Start the routine by rubbing a cleanser on your face at morning and before bed to clear your skin's pores from all the dirt that gets stuck on it during the day. Be careful to chose products that doesn't contain alcohol as it dries the skin out.

Moisturiser
cerave-moisturizing-lotion2s9.png

After cleaning your skin, use a moisturising lotion on it to keep it hydrated all day. I can highly recommend products from CeraVe and Neutrogena.

SPF cream
zmatnujici-pletovy-krem-na-opalovani-spf-50-dry-touch-sun-care-cream-50-ml_1456411120190418124737.jpg

Always use sun protection cream before leaving your house, especially if you are white (but don't be lazy even if you are not, even the darkest of darkest blacks only have a natural SPF of around 15). Use as high factored as possible, at least 30 (you can use higher factored, more expensive one on your valuable face and cheaper low factored elsewhere on your body to save money). A smart idea is to use a moisturiser lotion that has SPF built into it.

Tretinoin
3553533.JPG

A retinoid sold under the brand name Retin A or Retino among others, it does wonders for acne, skin tightness, wrinkle prevention and collagen production. It comes in different strengths (0.01%, 0.025% and 0.1%). I recommend starting with the weakest one and see it if you need to up the strength. Apply a pea sized amount from the cream and rub it evenly on your skin before going to bed. It increases sensitivity to sun rays, so be sure to apply SPF too.

Chapstick
featured-balm.jpg

Use chapstick on your lips at morning and before bed to keep them hydrated and glowing. Dry, chapped lips look horrible so you should avoid those with this cheap tool.

Exfoliating
image

Once or twice a week take the time to exfoliate after you have cleansed your skin. Rub the exfoliating cream on your skin to remove dead skin, then wash it off with water when you are finished.

Red light lamp
red-light-therapy.jpg

Use a red light lamp once or twice a week for 15 minutes by looking at it with your face from 60-70 cm (use sunglasses to protect your eyes). The wattage doesn't really matter but the wavelength of the light should be around 670nm. It increases blood flow, helps with acne, collagen production, elasticity and improves mitochondrial function.

Help of a professional - visiting a cosmetician or a dermatologist
If you are struggling with severe acne, has blackheads, acne scars or other issues, you should regularly see a cosmetician and get your skin cleaned professionaly, like on a monthly basis. If you have serious skin conditions seek the help of a dermatologist before ordering Accutane from some vendor from the slums of Mumbai just because some autist recommended you to do so on an internet forum.

II. Nutrition
I can recommend you eating as much animal based foods as possible to achieve mogger skin. A thread I made before detailing my diet:
https://looksmax.org/threads/my-diet.421718/

Some key elements in your diet to keep your eye on:

Protein
Eat enough protein to fuel your body as it literally creates everything from breaking the protein down thousands of different amino acids then rebuilding it to make your skin renew itself constantly. Aim for at least 2g / lean body mass kg (1 g / lbs) of animal based protein per day

Fats
Animal fats are essential for keeping your skin healthy and strong. Don't hesitate to eat shitload of saturated fat and cholesterol despite what normies say about them. Don't fall for the fear mongering against PUFAs. Both omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids are essential nutrients which the body can't produce on itself. They are the building blocks of cell membranes and help keep the skin hydrated. What in reality matters is keeping the omega3/6 ratio between 1:1 and 1:4.

Collagen
You should aid your body's natural collagen production by making bone broth or supplementing through hydrolized animal collagen peptides. Beef, fish, pork it doesn't really matter, eat as much as you can afford, the more the better. I personnaly consume 20 g of hydrolized beef collagen peptides a day.

Hyaluronic acid
Helps increase skin moisture and reduce dryness. You should get around 100-200mg daily from supplements.

Vitamin A
Promotes skin health by giving certain amount of protection from sunburn and fighting free radicals as an antioxidant. Don't be affraid to megadose it as it seems to clear the skin in high doses. The best natural source of it is liver, doesn't matter from what animal. For reference just 100g of pork liver has 700% of the RDA of vitamin A, talking about nature's superfoods.

Vitamin C
Ascorbic acid is essential for tissue reparation and collagen formation. It is crucial to keep in mind that due to their molecules being so similar, glucose (sugar) competes in absorption with vitamin C:
D9YbcMOWwAAUilI.jpg

What this means in practical terms is the more carbs you eat, the more vitamin C you need as it greatly hinders it's absorption. You can get away with as low as liver's natural ascorbic acid content (around 40mg / 100g) if you eat carnivorous and avoid carbs but otherwise aim for 2-3 gramms per day if you are following a conventional, carbohydrate based diet.


Vitamin D
Helps the skin from premature aging while also plays an integral role in protection and rejuvenation. The lighter your skin, the easier you can synthetise it from sunlight. White guys can get away even with 15 mins of winter sun but if you are black and live in Europe or other northern places you should definitely supplement it exogenously. Fatty oily fish like mackerel and hering are excellent sources to do so.

Vitamin E
A powerful antioxidant which reduces UV damage coming from the sun and helps fighting the inflammation caused by it. Fish and seafood are a good animal sources of it.

Vitamin K
Helps wounds, bruises, stretch marks and cuts to heal. Brightens dark circles, boosts skin elasticity, reduces the appearance of under eye sagging and wrinkles. You don't really have to worry about it since chances are you already eat enough of it. You want to have the K2 variant tho, found in animal sources (K1, the one found in plant foods has dogshit absorption ratio).

Zinc
Has anti-inflammatory effects which makes it effective against acne.Found in meat in abundance.

Water
Consume at least 4-5 liters of water per day to help keep your skin moisturised.

II. Ideal skintone and darkness
Warm skin undertone
The ideal skin tone for men is warm, glowing and orangeish, as opposed to pale and pinkish, seen on the left:
28329_square.jpg


Beta carotene
dreamstime_m_66770579.jpg

A precursor of vitamin A and a carotene which is naturally found in yellow - orange vegetables giving them their iconic color. It makes your skin undertone yellowish. Good food sources include sweet potatoes, carrots and pumpkins, but you can also get it from tablets. I recommend doing a loading phase for 1-2 weeks intaking 100 000 IUs of beta carotene (vitamin A is fat solluble meaning it gets deposited) daily, then maintenance at 25 - 50 000 IUs / day.

Lycopene
Chemical-structure-and-various-source-of-lycopene.png

Also a carotene, which gives red undertone to your skin and makes it glowing when consumed. Found in tomatoes naturally, but you can also take from tablets. I recommend 20mgs / day. Use in combination with beta carotene to achieve warm orange toned skin.

Myself as an example:
View attachment 1437169
The picture on the left shows my original skintone few years ago during wintertime. The pic on the right was taken just now. I haven't done any tanning lately (and haven't gotten any sun either as it's cold December rn in Europe), only been using carotenoids.


Skin darkness
The ideal skin darkness for men is that of olive, light brown or caramel color. Mulattoes and light skin niggas already have this color so if you are one, congratulations, you have nothing to do in this department. Meeks' coloring is perhaps as good as it gets:
jm-1.jpg


Olive skin, common that of Meds is also very good:
936full-jon-kortajarena.jpg


But Nordic and other white guys can achieve it too with a bit of effort, a good example is Swedish model Arvid Hestner:
7e717e026f461542d6bd9900b2f80fd620899207.jpg


If you are South Asian, Middle Eastern / North African, Latino or South East Asian you should avoid darkening your skin any more, but can use carotenoids regardless for glowing skin.

For white guys the skin darkening methods starting from the best to worst are the following:

a) Melanotan
If you want to (semi) permanently darken your skin without raping your collagen and major negative side effects, Melanotan 1 or 2 is the way to go. You can inject it or use it in the form of a nasal spray if you are afraid of needles. Melanotan is especially recommended for gingers and white guys with extremely light Fitzpatrick 1 skin as it not only darkens the skin itself but also hair follicles, leading to a more masculine pheno.
264621439_4913154318715618_7538207169918509101_n.jpg


b) Self tanner
1-tan-questionable-gosling-big-short-gentleman-journal-664x442-c-center.jpg

A much less effective alternative compared to Melanotan. Self tanning creams and sprays darken your epithelium (the outer layer of the skin), which sheds continously, which means the darkening effect goes away very fast, perhaps as short as a week. The color of it can look very fake (bright yellow / orange) if you buy a shitty product, making you a laughning stock. Remove facial & body hair and exfoliate before using a self tanner to prevent uneven spots. Pros of it include saving your collagen and working fast (it darkens you in a few hours).

c) Tanning bed
51312cdcae7e5.image.jpg

Tanning beds give the most natural tan and the effect is instant but that's where their list of pros end. Other than that the UV rays coming from the machines are horrible for your skin, leading to wrinkles over long term and lost of collagen plus they are pricy to use too. Only use one if you need to get a tan as soon as possible and have no other option otherwise.

III. Facial & body hair removal
Non permanent hair removal

a) Epilating
520029-ek647.png

By far the best non permanent hair removal method. Originally women use it as it provides 2-6 weeks of baby smooth skin after one session, but don't let this fool you, if anything it makes more sense for men to use it despite your average normie calling this method faggot. The only downside of it is that it's painful as fuck for the first sessions as the machine works by tearing your hair follicles out of your skin, one by one (it doesn't cause any skin irriation tho). I recommend to use it in the shower with shower cream as the added lotion prevents pain.

b) Waxing
mh-chest-wax-1533759591.png

Works the same way as an epilator does, by removing your hair follicles altogether. A bit less painful than epilating, but it's much more expensive on the long run since it's not a one time purchase, you will have to keep buying waxing tapes or go to a professional.

c) Shaving
By far the shittiest method to remove facial &body hair as it only does so with the part above your skin, which means you will constantly have to shave every few days.
Something like a Philips Bodygroom Series body hair removal device provides fast, painless altough half assed results:
back-body-groom.jpg


If you don't posses any of those for whatever reaso, at least use a safety razor instead of cartridge (as it's a lot cheaper and the single blade means less skin irriation). Be sure to use a non alcoholic aftershave balm afterwards.
bevel-1577744148.jpg


Permanent hair removal

a) Electrolysis
needle.jpg

The most effective yet by far the most expensive and time consuming permanent hair removal method, which works on all skin tones, on all body parts. It removes hair one by one by destroying their growth center with heat. After a very fine probe is inserted into the hair follicle and the hair is removed with tweezers.

b) Laser hair removal
IMG_9540-e1568704982503.jpg

Laser treatment affects hair in the active growth phase (anagen stage). The laser beam is made up of precisely controlled pulses of energy which are absorbed by the melanin or pigment in the hair, reaching into the active hair follicles that lie beneath the skin. Essentially, the energy heats the hair – right down to the bottom of the root – safely destroying it without damaging surrounding tissue or skin. Most people will need a course of between six and eight sessions, after which time the hair will be visibly reduced or permanently removed and the skin will appear smooth and even. Cheaper than electrolysis and each session is only like half an hour.

c) Intense Pulsed Light (IPL)
Can-You-Get-Laser-Hair-Removal-on-Your-Face.jpg

In contrast to laser hair removal it uses a broad spectrum of light with multiple wavelengths. This means it has more unfocused energy around the hair and skin area.” So, IPL uses multi-spectrum lights whereas laser use single spectrum light, “meaning IPL energy is scattered and much weaker. Laser has a densified light, and all energy is focused on this single light. Spectrum lights are measured as wavelength (nm), for example, 755nm wavelength means this spectrum light can penetrate 755nm deep beneath the skin. 755nm wavelength light is best attracted to melanin, so it is best used for hair removal. 532nm means light can reach up to 532nm beneath the skin.

When used for hair removal specifically, IPL usually requires six to eight treatments to see a complete removal of hair in an area. This is dependent, however, on the person's skin colour, hair colour and also the thickness of the hair. IPL technology works best on very light skin combined with dark hair (vampire pheno):
26e5fb277022cbe94be2f86f65ef6488.jpg


IPL is by far the least effective out of the permanent hair removal methods but it's the cheapest and most avaible one as you can buy your own IPL device yourself and do it at home if you want to.
1582217354-philips-lumea-prestige-bri954-crop-1582217320.jpg

IV. Makeup for men
Blemish Balm (BB)
81ytonue+JL._SL1500_.jpg

BB is like a a skin tone tinted moisturiser with extra benefits. These multitasking products can correct redness and discolouration, conceal spots and scars, smooth fine lines and wrinkles, brighten and moisturise, and protect with sun protection filters. They’re practical too, and easier to carry around than the combined products they can sub for: moisturiser, sun screen, concealer. Basically, BBs are a lighter, more man-friendly version of foundation. Make sure to choose one that fits your natural skin tone as close as possible.

Concealer
maxresdefault.jpg

3c3e9f54fafa1424fc5aa10f44558184.jpg



Helps cover dark circles, blemishes, scars, and other imperfections of the face. Using your (clean) finger, take a little bit of concealer from the pot and dot onto any areas you'd like to cover. Remember, a little goes a long way and you can always add more if needed. Using your finger or a slightly damp Face Sponge, blend the concealer by tapping it lightly until it's completely blended in. When blending concealer in, tap the product in rather than dragging it. Use your fourth finger for the lightest touch. Also take care to smooth out any concealer sitting in creases under the eyes. As with BB cream, try to purchase one that fits your skin color.

Contouring
hqdefault.jpg


Personally I haven't tried it, but I am aware of the fact the along with a shitton of filters and digital photo manipulation, prettyboys and models on social media use contouring all the time in order for their face to look more angular and chiselled using different shades of products. Do it at your own will, I personally wouldn't risk getting caught with it irl as my cheeks are decent as they are. I would consider using it when taking photos to post on social media tho.

Regardless of what makeup products you use don't forget to wash it off before going to bed as leaving stuff on your face can lead to irriation and acne breakouts if not careful.


@astatine @TsarTsar444 @Preoximerianas @PingPong @ecstazy @looksmaxxer234 @Htobrother @Z3n @one job away @Lev Peshkov @WannabeJock @Carnivore @roninmaxxer @Lecoteco @FloridaDude
I'll try
 
One year difference with tretinoin and azelaic acid. Routine below:

AM


  • Wash face with warm water (I use a facewash at night only)
  • apply small amount 20% azelaic acid and let it get absorbed totally (using aziderm cream from skinorac)
  • Then I apply cerave tub moisturiser.
  • Then I finish it off with Mermaid skin sunscreen SPF 50

PM

· Use Cerave salicylic acid face wash to gently wash the face.

· Dry completely before using tretinoin 0.05 % (using A Ret gel from Skinorac) again. Wait for 30 mins.

· Rub with Aquaphor on top

I started with 0.025 percent and worked my way up, starting with 3x/week
Go for chlorine dioxide, MMS1 or MMS2.
It will clear your skin in no time and get you healthy 100%.
Tested and approved for other issues.

I thank God for being born with top tier skin.
 
Pretty good post
 
I recommend 20mgs / day. Use in combination with beta carotene to achieve warm orange toned skin.
@eduardkoopman think you're one of the few ones that actually achieved a great change in skin-tone, what kind of beta-carotene dosage were/are you consuming?
 
  • +1
Reactions: Moggedbyevery1
@eduardkoopman think you're one of the few ones that actually achieved a great change in skin-tone, what kind of beta-carotene dosage were/are you consuming?
Does that shit actually work? BRB downing a can of tomato paste when I get home
 
  • +1
Reactions: Corleone
Excellent fucking thread
 
I. Skincare
Skincare routine

View attachment 1437245

Facial cleanser
41YuSwjJUIL.jpg

Start the routine by rubbing a cleanser on your face at morning and before bed to clear your skin's pores from all the dirt that gets stuck on it during the day. Be careful to chose products that doesn't contain alcohol as it dries the skin out.

Moisturiser
cerave-moisturizing-lotion2s9.png

After cleaning your skin, use a moisturising lotion on it to keep it hydrated all day. I can highly recommend products from CeraVe and Neutrogena.

SPF cream
zmatnujici-pletovy-krem-na-opalovani-spf-50-dry-touch-sun-care-cream-50-ml_1456411120190418124737.jpg

Always use sun protection cream before leaving your house, especially if you are white (but don't be lazy even if you are not, even the darkest of darkest blacks only have a natural SPF of around 15). Use as high factored as possible, at least 30 (you can use higher factored, more expensive one on your valuable face and cheaper low factored elsewhere on your body to save money). A smart idea is to use a moisturiser lotion that has SPF built into it.

Tretinoin
3553533.JPG

A retinoid sold under the brand name Retin A or Retino among others, it does wonders for acne, skin tightness, wrinkle prevention and collagen production. It comes in different strengths (0.01%, 0.025% and 0.1%). I recommend starting with the weakest one and see it if you need to up the strength. Apply a pea sized amount from the cream and rub it evenly on your skin before going to bed. It increases sensitivity to sun rays, so be sure to apply SPF too.

Chapstick
featured-balm.jpg

Use chapstick on your lips at morning and before bed to keep them hydrated and glowing. Dry, chapped lips look horrible so you should avoid those with this cheap tool.

Exfoliating
image

Once or twice a week take the time to exfoliate after you have cleansed your skin. Rub the exfoliating cream on your skin to remove dead skin, then wash it off with water when you are finished.

Red light lamp
red-light-therapy.jpg

Use a red light lamp once or twice a week for 15 minutes by looking at it with your face from 60-70 cm (use sunglasses to protect your eyes). The wattage doesn't really matter but the wavelength of the light should be around 670nm. It increases blood flow, helps with acne, collagen production, elasticity and improves mitochondrial function.

Help of a professional - visiting a cosmetician or a dermatologist
If you are struggling with severe acne, has blackheads, acne scars or other issues, you should regularly see a cosmetician and get your skin cleaned professionaly, like on a monthly basis. If you have serious skin conditions seek the help of a dermatologist before ordering Accutane from some vendor from the slums of Mumbai just because some autist recommended you to do so on an internet forum.

II. Nutrition
I can recommend you eating as much animal based foods as possible to achieve mogger skin. A thread I made before detailing my diet:
https://looksmax.org/threads/my-diet.421718/

Some key elements in your diet to keep your eye on:

Protein
Eat enough protein to fuel your body as it literally creates everything from breaking the protein down thousands of different amino acids then rebuilding it to make your skin renew itself constantly. Aim for at least 2g / lean body mass kg (1 g / lbs) of animal based protein per day

Fats
Animal fats are essential for keeping your skin healthy and strong. Don't hesitate to eat shitload of saturated fat and cholesterol despite what normies say about them. Don't fall for the fear mongering against PUFAs. Both omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids are essential nutrients which the body can't produce on itself. They are the building blocks of cell membranes and help keep the skin hydrated. What in reality matters is keeping the omega3/6 ratio between 1:1 and 1:4.

Collagen
You should aid your body's natural collagen production by making bone broth or supplementing through hydrolized animal collagen peptides. Beef, fish, pork it doesn't really matter, eat as much as you can afford, the more the better. I personnaly consume 20 g of hydrolized beef collagen peptides a day.

Hyaluronic acid
Helps increase skin moisture and reduce dryness. You should get around 100-200mg daily from supplements.

Vitamin A
Promotes skin health by giving certain amount of protection from sunburn and fighting free radicals as an antioxidant. Don't be affraid to megadose it as it seems to clear the skin in high doses. The best natural source of it is liver, doesn't matter from what animal. For reference just 100g of pork liver has 700% of the RDA of vitamin A, talking about nature's superfoods.

Vitamin C
Ascorbic acid is essential for tissue reparation and collagen formation. It is crucial to keep in mind that due to their molecules being so similar, glucose (sugar) competes in absorption with vitamin C:
D9YbcMOWwAAUilI.jpg

What this means in practical terms is the more carbs you eat, the more vitamin C you need as it greatly hinders it's absorption. You can get away with as low as liver's natural ascorbic acid content (around 40mg / 100g) if you eat carnivorous and avoid carbs but otherwise aim for 2-3 gramms per day if you are following a conventional, carbohydrate based diet.


Vitamin D
Helps the skin from premature aging while also plays an integral role in protection and rejuvenation. The lighter your skin, the easier you can synthetise it from sunlight. White guys can get away even with 15 mins of winter sun but if you are black and live in Europe or other northern places you should definitely supplement it exogenously. Fatty oily fish like mackerel and hering are excellent sources to do so.

Vitamin E
A powerful antioxidant which reduces UV damage coming from the sun and helps fighting the inflammation caused by it. Fish and seafood are a good animal sources of it.

Vitamin K
Helps wounds, bruises, stretch marks and cuts to heal. Brightens dark circles, boosts skin elasticity, reduces the appearance of under eye sagging and wrinkles. You don't really have to worry about it since chances are you already eat enough of it. You want to have the K2 variant tho, found in animal sources (K1, the one found in plant foods has dogshit absorption ratio).

Zinc
Has anti-inflammatory effects which makes it effective against acne.Found in meat in abundance.

Water
Consume at least 4-5 liters of water per day to help keep your skin moisturised.

II. Ideal skintone and darkness
Warm skin undertone
The ideal skin tone for men is warm, glowing and orangeish, as opposed to pale and pinkish, seen on the left:
28329_square.jpg


Beta carotene
dreamstime_m_66770579.jpg

A precursor of vitamin A and a carotene which is naturally found in yellow - orange vegetables giving them their iconic color. It makes your skin undertone yellowish. Good food sources include sweet potatoes, carrots and pumpkins, but you can also get it from tablets. I recommend doing a loading phase for 1-2 weeks intaking 100 000 IUs of beta carotene (vitamin A is fat solluble meaning it gets deposited) daily, then maintenance at 25 - 50 000 IUs / day.

Lycopene
Chemical-structure-and-various-source-of-lycopene.png

Also a carotene, which gives red undertone to your skin and makes it glowing when consumed. Found in tomatoes naturally, but you can also take from tablets. I recommend 20mgs / day. Use in combination with beta carotene to achieve warm orange toned skin.

Myself as an example:
View attachment 1437169
The picture on the left shows my original skintone few years ago during wintertime. The pic on the right was taken just now. I haven't done any tanning lately (and haven't gotten any sun either as it's cold December rn in Europe), only been using carotenoids.


Skin darkness
The ideal skin darkness for men is that of olive, light brown or caramel color. Mulattoes and light skin niggas already have this color so if you are one, congratulations, you have nothing to do in this department. Meeks' coloring is perhaps as good as it gets:
jm-1.jpg


Olive skin, common that of Meds is also very good:
936full-jon-kortajarena.jpg


But Nordic and other white guys can achieve it too with a bit of effort, a good example is Swedish model Arvid Hestner:
7e717e026f461542d6bd9900b2f80fd620899207.jpg


If you are South Asian, Middle Eastern / North African, Latino or South East Asian you should avoid darkening your skin any more, but can use carotenoids regardless for glowing skin.

For white guys the skin darkening methods starting from the best to worst are the following:

a) Melanotan
If you want to (semi) permanently darken your skin without raping your collagen and major negative side effects, Melanotan 1 or 2 is the way to go. You can inject it or use it in the form of a nasal spray if you are afraid of needles. Melanotan is especially recommended for gingers and white guys with extremely light Fitzpatrick 1 skin as it not only darkens the skin itself but also hair follicles, leading to a more masculine pheno.
264621439_4913154318715618_7538207169918509101_n.jpg


b) Self tanner
1-tan-questionable-gosling-big-short-gentleman-journal-664x442-c-center.jpg

A much less effective alternative compared to Melanotan. Self tanning creams and sprays darken your epithelium (the outer layer of the skin), which sheds continously, which means the darkening effect goes away very fast, perhaps as short as a week. The color of it can look very fake (bright yellow / orange) if you buy a shitty product, making you a laughning stock. Remove facial & body hair and exfoliate before using a self tanner to prevent uneven spots. Pros of it include saving your collagen and working fast (it darkens you in a few hours).

c) Tanning bed
51312cdcae7e5.image.jpg

Tanning beds give the most natural tan and the effect is instant but that's where their list of pros end. Other than that the UV rays coming from the machines are horrible for your skin, leading to wrinkles over long term and lost of collagen plus they are pricy to use too. Only use one if you need to get a tan as soon as possible and have no other option otherwise.

III. Facial & body hair removal
Non permanent hair removal

a) Epilating
520029-ek647.png

By far the best non permanent hair removal method. Originally women use it as it provides 2-6 weeks of baby smooth skin after one session, but don't let this fool you, if anything it makes more sense for men to use it despite your average normie calling this method faggot. The only downside of it is that it's painful as fuck for the first sessions as the machine works by tearing your hair follicles out of your skin, one by one (it doesn't cause any skin irriation tho). I recommend to use it in the shower with shower cream as the added lotion prevents pain.

b) Waxing
mh-chest-wax-1533759591.png

Works the same way as an epilator does, by removing your hair follicles altogether. A bit less painful than epilating, but it's much more expensive on the long run since it's not a one time purchase, you will have to keep buying waxing tapes or go to a professional.

c) Shaving
By far the shittiest method to remove facial &body hair as it only does so with the part above your skin, which means you will constantly have to shave every few days.
Something like a Philips Bodygroom Series body hair removal device provides fast, painless altough half assed results:
back-body-groom.jpg


If you don't posses any of those for whatever reaso, at least use a safety razor instead of cartridge (as it's a lot cheaper and the single blade means less skin irriation). Be sure to use a non alcoholic aftershave balm afterwards.
bevel-1577744148.jpg


Permanent hair removal

a) Electrolysis
needle.jpg

The most effective yet by far the most expensive and time consuming permanent hair removal method, which works on all skin tones, on all body parts. It removes hair one by one by destroying their growth center with heat. After a very fine probe is inserted into the hair follicle and the hair is removed with tweezers.

b) Laser hair removal
IMG_9540-e1568704982503.jpg

Laser treatment affects hair in the active growth phase (anagen stage). The laser beam is made up of precisely controlled pulses of energy which are absorbed by the melanin or pigment in the hair, reaching into the active hair follicles that lie beneath the skin. Essentially, the energy heats the hair – right down to the bottom of the root – safely destroying it without damaging surrounding tissue or skin. Most people will need a course of between six and eight sessions, after which time the hair will be visibly reduced or permanently removed and the skin will appear smooth and even. Cheaper than electrolysis and each session is only like half an hour.

c) Intense Pulsed Light (IPL)
Can-You-Get-Laser-Hair-Removal-on-Your-Face.jpg

In contrast to laser hair removal it uses a broad spectrum of light with multiple wavelengths. This means it has more unfocused energy around the hair and skin area.” So, IPL uses multi-spectrum lights whereas laser use single spectrum light, “meaning IPL energy is scattered and much weaker. Laser has a densified light, and all energy is focused on this single light. Spectrum lights are measured as wavelength (nm), for example, 755nm wavelength means this spectrum light can penetrate 755nm deep beneath the skin. 755nm wavelength light is best attracted to melanin, so it is best used for hair removal. 532nm means light can reach up to 532nm beneath the skin.

When used for hair removal specifically, IPL usually requires six to eight treatments to see a complete removal of hair in an area. This is dependent, however, on the person's skin colour, hair colour and also the thickness of the hair. IPL technology works best on very light skin combined with dark hair (vampire pheno):
26e5fb277022cbe94be2f86f65ef6488.jpg


IPL is by far the least effective out of the permanent hair removal methods but it's the cheapest and most avaible one as you can buy your own IPL device yourself and do it at home if you want to.
1582217354-philips-lumea-prestige-bri954-crop-1582217320.jpg

IV. Makeup for men
Blemish Balm (BB)
81ytonue+JL._SL1500_.jpg

BB is like a a skin tone tinted moisturiser with extra benefits. These multitasking products can correct redness and discolouration, conceal spots and scars, smooth fine lines and wrinkles, brighten and moisturise, and protect with sun protection filters. They’re practical too, and easier to carry around than the combined products they can sub for: moisturiser, sun screen, concealer. Basically, BBs are a lighter, more man-friendly version of foundation. Make sure to choose one that fits your natural skin tone as close as possible.

Concealer
maxresdefault.jpg

3c3e9f54fafa1424fc5aa10f44558184.jpg



Helps cover dark circles, blemishes, scars, and other imperfections of the face. Using your (clean) finger, take a little bit of concealer from the pot and dot onto any areas you'd like to cover. Remember, a little goes a long way and you can always add more if needed. Using your finger or a slightly damp Face Sponge, blend the concealer by tapping it lightly until it's completely blended in. When blending concealer in, tap the product in rather than dragging it. Use your fourth finger for the lightest touch. Also take care to smooth out any concealer sitting in creases under the eyes. As with BB cream, try to purchase one that fits your skin color.

Contouring
hqdefault.jpg


Personally I haven't tried it, but I am aware of the fact the along with a shitton of filters and digital photo manipulation, prettyboys and models on social media use contouring all the time in order for their face to look more angular and chiselled using different shades of products. Do it at your own will, I personally wouldn't risk getting caught with it irl as my cheeks are decent as they are. I would consider using it when taking photos to post on social media tho.

Regardless of what makeup products you use don't forget to wash it off before going to bed as leaving stuff on your face can lead to irriation and acne breakouts if not careful.


@astatine @TsarTsar444 @Preoximerianas @PingPong @ecstazy @looksmaxxer234 @Htobrother @Z3n @one job away @Lev Peshkov @WannabeJock @Carnivore @roninmaxxer @Lecoteco @FloridaDude
Just apply coconut oil
 
  • +1
Reactions: Corleone
III. Facial & body hair removal
Non permanent hair removal

a) Epilating
520029-ek647.png

By far the best non permanent hair removal method. Originally women use it as it provides 2-6 weeks of baby smooth skin after one session, but don't let this fool you, if anything it makes more sense for men to use it despite your average normie calling this method faggot. The only downside of it is that it's painful as fuck for the first sessions as the machine works by tearing your hair follicles out of your skin, one by one (it doesn't cause any skin irriation tho). I recommend to use it in the shower with shower cream as the added lotion prevents pain.

IMG_9540-e1568704982503.jpg
Can epilating be done on the face?
 
Semen retention
 
I just wipe cum on my face
 
Will following this guide get rid of the dark circles around my eyes? I heard it could be genetic however I didn't have them as a kid and only now have them cuz I am codecel.
 
does OP imply to use epilator on face or on chest?
 
Will following this guide get rid of the dark circles around my eyes? I heard it could be genetic however I didn't have them as a kid and only now have them cuz I am codecel.
not geneticly then
 
I. Skincare
Skincare routine

View attachment 1437245

Facial cleanser
41YuSwjJUIL.jpg

Start the routine by rubbing a cleanser on your face at morning and before bed to clear your skin's pores from all the dirt that gets stuck on it during the day. Be careful to chose products that doesn't contain alcohol as it dries the skin out.

Moisturiser
cerave-moisturizing-lotion2s9.png

After cleaning your skin, use a moisturising lotion on it to keep it hydrated all day. I can highly recommend products from CeraVe and Neutrogena.

SPF cream
zmatnujici-pletovy-krem-na-opalovani-spf-50-dry-touch-sun-care-cream-50-ml_1456411120190418124737.jpg

Always use sun protection cream before leaving your house, especially if you are white (but don't be lazy even if you are not, even the darkest of darkest blacks only have a natural SPF of around 15). Use as high factored as possible, at least 30 (you can use higher factored, more expensive one on your valuable face and cheaper low factored elsewhere on your body to save money). A smart idea is to use a moisturiser lotion that has SPF built into it.

Tretinoin
3553533.JPG

A retinoid sold under the brand name Retin A or Retino among others, it does wonders for acne, skin tightness, wrinkle prevention and collagen production. It comes in different strengths (0.01%, 0.025% and 0.1%). I recommend starting with the weakest one and see it if you need to up the strength. Apply a pea sized amount from the cream and rub it evenly on your skin before going to bed. It increases sensitivity to sun rays, so be sure to apply SPF too.

Chapstick
featured-balm.jpg

Use chapstick on your lips at morning and before bed to keep them hydrated and glowing. Dry, chapped lips look horrible so you should avoid those with this cheap tool.

Exfoliating
image

Once or twice a week take the time to exfoliate after you have cleansed your skin. Rub the exfoliating cream on your skin to remove dead skin, then wash it off with water when you are finished.

Red light lamp
red-light-therapy.jpg

Use a red light lamp once or twice a week for 15 minutes by looking at it with your face from 60-70 cm (use sunglasses to protect your eyes). The wattage doesn't really matter but the wavelength of the light should be around 670nm. It increases blood flow, helps with acne, collagen production, elasticity and improves mitochondrial function.

Help of a professional - visiting a cosmetician or a dermatologist
If you are struggling with severe acne, has blackheads, acne scars or other issues, you should regularly see a cosmetician and get your skin cleaned professionaly, like on a monthly basis. If you have serious skin conditions seek the help of a dermatologist before ordering Accutane from some vendor from the slums of Mumbai just because some autist recommended you to do so on an internet forum.

II. Nutrition
I can recommend you eating as much animal based foods as possible to achieve mogger skin. A thread I made before detailing my diet:
https://looksmax.org/threads/my-diet.421718/

Some key elements in your diet to keep your eye on:

Protein
Eat enough protein to fuel your body as it literally creates everything from breaking the protein down thousands of different amino acids then rebuilding it to make your skin renew itself constantly. Aim for at least 2g / lean body mass kg (1 g / lbs) of animal based protein per day

Fats
Animal fats are essential for keeping your skin healthy and strong. Don't hesitate to eat shitload of saturated fat and cholesterol despite what normies say about them. Don't fall for the fear mongering against PUFAs. Both omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids are essential nutrients which the body can't produce on itself. They are the building blocks of cell membranes and help keep the skin hydrated. What in reality matters is keeping the omega3/6 ratio between 1:1 and 1:4.

Collagen
You should aid your body's natural collagen production by making bone broth or supplementing through hydrolized animal collagen peptides. Beef, fish, pork it doesn't really matter, eat as much as you can afford, the more the better. I personnaly consume 20 g of hydrolized beef collagen peptides a day.

Hyaluronic acid
Helps increase skin moisture and reduce dryness. You should get around 100-200mg daily from supplements.

Vitamin A
Promotes skin health by giving certain amount of protection from sunburn and fighting free radicals as an antioxidant. Don't be affraid to megadose it as it seems to clear the skin in high doses. The best natural source of it is liver, doesn't matter from what animal. For reference just 100g of pork liver has 700% of the RDA of vitamin A, talking about nature's superfoods.

Vitamin C
Ascorbic acid is essential for tissue reparation and collagen formation. It is crucial to keep in mind that due to their molecules being so similar, glucose (sugar) competes in absorption with vitamin C:
D9YbcMOWwAAUilI.jpg

What this means in practical terms is the more carbs you eat, the more vitamin C you need as it greatly hinders it's absorption. You can get away with as low as liver's natural ascorbic acid content (around 40mg / 100g) if you eat carnivorous and avoid carbs but otherwise aim for 2-3 gramms per day if you are following a conventional, carbohydrate based diet.


Vitamin D
Helps the skin from premature aging while also plays an integral role in protection and rejuvenation. The lighter your skin, the easier you can synthetise it from sunlight. White guys can get away even with 15 mins of winter sun but if you are black and live in Europe or other northern places you should definitely supplement it exogenously. Fatty oily fish like mackerel and hering are excellent sources to do so.

Vitamin E
A powerful antioxidant which reduces UV damage coming from the sun and helps fighting the inflammation caused by it. Fish and seafood are a good animal sources of it.

Vitamin K
Helps wounds, bruises, stretch marks and cuts to heal. Brightens dark circles, boosts skin elasticity, reduces the appearance of under eye sagging and wrinkles. You don't really have to worry about it since chances are you already eat enough of it. You want to have the K2 variant tho, found in animal sources (K1, the one found in plant foods has dogshit absorption ratio).

Zinc
Has anti-inflammatory effects which makes it effective against acne.Found in meat in abundance.

Water
Consume at least 4-5 liters of water per day to help keep your skin moisturised.

II. Ideal skintone and darkness
Warm skin undertone
The ideal skin tone for men is warm, glowing and orangeish, as opposed to pale and pinkish, seen on the left:
28329_square.jpg


Beta carotene
dreamstime_m_66770579.jpg

A precursor of vitamin A and a carotene which is naturally found in yellow - orange vegetables giving them their iconic color. It makes your skin undertone yellowish. Good food sources include sweet potatoes, carrots and pumpkins, but you can also get it from tablets. I recommend doing a loading phase for 1-2 weeks intaking 100 000 IUs of beta carotene (vitamin A is fat solluble meaning it gets deposited) daily, then maintenance at 25 - 50 000 IUs / day.

Lycopene
Chemical-structure-and-various-source-of-lycopene.png

Also a carotene, which gives red undertone to your skin and makes it glowing when consumed. Found in tomatoes naturally, but you can also take from tablets. I recommend 20mgs / day. Use in combination with beta carotene to achieve warm orange toned skin.

Myself as an example:
View attachment 1437169
The picture on the left shows my original skintone few years ago during wintertime. The pic on the right was taken just now. I haven't done any tanning lately (and haven't gotten any sun either as it's cold December rn in Europe), only been using carotenoids.


Skin darkness
The ideal skin darkness for men is that of olive, light brown or caramel color. Mulattoes and light skin niggas already have this color so if you are one, congratulations, you have nothing to do in this department. Meeks' coloring is perhaps as good as it gets:
jm-1.jpg


Olive skin, common that of Meds is also very good:
936full-jon-kortajarena.jpg


But Nordic and other white guys can achieve it too with a bit of effort, a good example is Swedish model Arvid Hestner:
7e717e026f461542d6bd9900b2f80fd620899207.jpg


If you are South Asian, Middle Eastern / North African, Latino or South East Asian you should avoid darkening your skin any more, but can use carotenoids regardless for glowing skin.

For white guys the skin darkening methods starting from the best to worst are the following:

a) Melanotan
If you want to (semi) permanently darken your skin without raping your collagen and major negative side effects, Melanotan 1 or 2 is the way to go. You can inject it or use it in the form of a nasal spray if you are afraid of needles. Melanotan is especially recommended for gingers and white guys with extremely light Fitzpatrick 1 skin as it not only darkens the skin itself but also hair follicles, leading to a more masculine pheno.
264621439_4913154318715618_7538207169918509101_n.jpg


b) Self tanner
1-tan-questionable-gosling-big-short-gentleman-journal-664x442-c-center.jpg

A much less effective alternative compared to Melanotan. Self tanning creams and sprays darken your epithelium (the outer layer of the skin), which sheds continously, which means the darkening effect goes away very fast, perhaps as short as a week. The color of it can look very fake (bright yellow / orange) if you buy a shitty product, making you a laughning stock. Remove facial & body hair and exfoliate before using a self tanner to prevent uneven spots. Pros of it include saving your collagen and working fast (it darkens you in a few hours).

c) Tanning bed
51312cdcae7e5.image.jpg

Tanning beds give the most natural tan and the effect is instant but that's where their list of pros end. Other than that the UV rays coming from the machines are horrible for your skin, leading to wrinkles over long term and lost of collagen plus they are pricy to use too. Only use one if you need to get a tan as soon as possible and have no other option otherwise.

III. Facial & body hair removal
Non permanent hair removal

a) Epilating
520029-ek647.png

By far the best non permanent hair removal method. Originally women use it as it provides 2-6 weeks of baby smooth skin after one session, but don't let this fool you, if anything it makes more sense for men to use it despite your average normie calling this method faggot. The only downside of it is that it's painful as fuck for the first sessions as the machine works by tearing your hair follicles out of your skin, one by one (it doesn't cause any skin irriation tho). I recommend to use it in the shower with shower cream as the added lotion prevents pain.

b) Waxing
mh-chest-wax-1533759591.png

Works the same way as an epilator does, by removing your hair follicles altogether. A bit less painful than epilating, but it's much more expensive on the long run since it's not a one time purchase, you will have to keep buying waxing tapes or go to a professional.

c) Shaving
By far the shittiest method to remove facial &body hair as it only does so with the part above your skin, which means you will constantly have to shave every few days.
Something like a Philips Bodygroom Series body hair removal device provides fast, painless altough half assed results:
back-body-groom.jpg


If you don't posses any of those for whatever reaso, at least use a safety razor instead of cartridge (as it's a lot cheaper and the single blade means less skin irriation). Be sure to use a non alcoholic aftershave balm afterwards.
bevel-1577744148.jpg


Permanent hair removal

a) Electrolysis
needle.jpg

The most effective yet by far the most expensive and time consuming permanent hair removal method, which works on all skin tones, on all body parts. It removes hair one by one by destroying their growth center with heat. After a very fine probe is inserted into the hair follicle and the hair is removed with tweezers.

b) Laser hair removal
IMG_9540-e1568704982503.jpg

Laser treatment affects hair in the active growth phase (anagen stage). The laser beam is made up of precisely controlled pulses of energy which are absorbed by the melanin or pigment in the hair, reaching into the active hair follicles that lie beneath the skin. Essentially, the energy heats the hair – right down to the bottom of the root – safely destroying it without damaging surrounding tissue or skin. Most people will need a course of between six and eight sessions, after which time the hair will be visibly reduced or permanently removed and the skin will appear smooth and even. Cheaper than electrolysis and each session is only like half an hour.

c) Intense Pulsed Light (IPL)
Can-You-Get-Laser-Hair-Removal-on-Your-Face.jpg

In contrast to laser hair removal it uses a broad spectrum of light with multiple wavelengths. This means it has more unfocused energy around the hair and skin area.” So, IPL uses multi-spectrum lights whereas laser use single spectrum light, “meaning IPL energy is scattered and much weaker. Laser has a densified light, and all energy is focused on this single light. Spectrum lights are measured as wavelength (nm), for example, 755nm wavelength means this spectrum light can penetrate 755nm deep beneath the skin. 755nm wavelength light is best attracted to melanin, so it is best used for hair removal. 532nm means light can reach up to 532nm beneath the skin.

When used for hair removal specifically, IPL usually requires six to eight treatments to see a complete removal of hair in an area. This is dependent, however, on the person's skin colour, hair colour and also the thickness of the hair. IPL technology works best on very light skin combined with dark hair (vampire pheno):
26e5fb277022cbe94be2f86f65ef6488.jpg


IPL is by far the least effective out of the permanent hair removal methods but it's the cheapest and most avaible one as you can buy your own IPL device yourself and do it at home if you want to.
1582217354-philips-lumea-prestige-bri954-crop-1582217320.jpg

IV. Makeup for men
Blemish Balm (BB)
81ytonue+JL._SL1500_.jpg

BB is like a a skin tone tinted moisturiser with extra benefits. These multitasking products can correct redness and discolouration, conceal spots and scars, smooth fine lines and wrinkles, brighten and moisturise, and protect with sun protection filters. They’re practical too, and easier to carry around than the combined products they can sub for: moisturiser, sun screen, concealer. Basically, BBs are a lighter, more man-friendly version of foundation. Make sure to choose one that fits your natural skin tone as close as possible.

Concealer
maxresdefault.jpg

3c3e9f54fafa1424fc5aa10f44558184.jpg



Helps cover dark circles, blemishes, scars, and other imperfections of the face. Using your (clean) finger, take a little bit of concealer from the pot and dot onto any areas you'd like to cover. Remember, a little goes a long way and you can always add more if needed. Using your finger or a slightly damp Face Sponge, blend the concealer by tapping it lightly until it's completely blended in. When blending concealer in, tap the product in rather than dragging it. Use your fourth finger for the lightest touch. Also take care to smooth out any concealer sitting in creases under the eyes. As with BB cream, try to purchase one that fits your skin color.

Contouring
hqdefault.jpg


Personally I haven't tried it, but I am aware of the fact the along with a shitton of filters and digital photo manipulation, prettyboys and models on social media use contouring all the time in order for their face to look more angular and chiselled using different shades of products. Do it at your own will, I personally wouldn't risk getting caught with it irl as my cheeks are decent as they are. I would consider using it when taking photos to post on social media tho.

Regardless of what makeup products you use don't forget to wash it off before going to bed as leaving stuff on your face can lead to irriation and acne breakouts if not careful.


@astatine @TsarTsar444 @Preoximerianas @PingPong @ecstazy @looksmaxxer234 @Htobrother @Z3n @one job away @Lev Peshkov @WannabeJock @Carnivore @roninmaxxer @Lecoteco @FloridaDude
Meeks tier skin would literally be considered dalit in North India😹😹
 
  • JFL
Reactions: BrahminBoss
i tried beta carotene for months even coupled with astaxanthin, im still pale :hnghn:
thats because beta carotene gets cleaved to vitamin a if u were deficient in latter, astaanthin does nothing.You need lycopene
 
I. Skincare
Skincare routine

View attachment 1437245

Facial cleanser
41YuSwjJUIL.jpg

Start the routine by rubbing a cleanser on your face at morning and before bed to clear your skin's pores from all the dirt that gets stuck on it during the day. Be careful to chose products that doesn't contain alcohol as it dries the skin out.

Moisturiser
cerave-moisturizing-lotion2s9.png

After cleaning your skin, use a moisturising lotion on it to keep it hydrated all day. I can highly recommend products from CeraVe and Neutrogena.

SPF cream
zmatnujici-pletovy-krem-na-opalovani-spf-50-dry-touch-sun-care-cream-50-ml_1456411120190418124737.jpg

Always use sun protection cream before leaving your house, especially if you are white (but don't be lazy even if you are not, even the darkest of darkest blacks only have a natural SPF of around 15). Use as high factored as possible, at least 30 (you can use higher factored, more expensive one on your valuable face and cheaper low factored elsewhere on your body to save money). A smart idea is to use a moisturiser lotion that has SPF built into it.

Tretinoin
3553533.JPG

A retinoid sold under the brand name Retin A or Retino among others, it does wonders for acne, skin tightness, wrinkle prevention and collagen production. It comes in different strengths (0.01%, 0.025% and 0.1%). I recommend starting with the weakest one and see it if you need to up the strength. Apply a pea sized amount from the cream and rub it evenly on your skin before going to bed. It increases sensitivity to sun rays, so be sure to apply SPF too.

Chapstick
featured-balm.jpg

Use chapstick on your lips at morning and before bed to keep them hydrated and glowing. Dry, chapped lips look horrible so you should avoid those with this cheap tool.

Exfoliating
image

Once or twice a week take the time to exfoliate after you have cleansed your skin. Rub the exfoliating cream on your skin to remove dead skin, then wash it off with water when you are finished.

Red light lamp
red-light-therapy.jpg

Use a red light lamp once or twice a week for 15 minutes by looking at it with your face from 60-70 cm (use sunglasses to protect your eyes). The wattage doesn't really matter but the wavelength of the light should be around 670nm. It increases blood flow, helps with acne, collagen production, elasticity and improves mitochondrial function.

Help of a professional - visiting a cosmetician or a dermatologist
If you are struggling with severe acne, has blackheads, acne scars or other issues, you should regularly see a cosmetician and get your skin cleaned professionaly, like on a monthly basis. If you have serious skin conditions seek the help of a dermatologist before ordering Accutane from some vendor from the slums of Mumbai just because some autist recommended you to do so on an internet forum.

II. Nutrition
I can recommend you eating as much animal based foods as possible to achieve mogger skin. A thread I made before detailing my diet:
https://looksmax.org/threads/my-diet.421718/

Some key elements in your diet to keep your eye on:

Protein
Eat enough protein to fuel your body as it literally creates everything from breaking the protein down thousands of different amino acids then rebuilding it to make your skin renew itself constantly. Aim for at least 2g / lean body mass kg (1 g / lbs) of animal based protein per day

Fats
Animal fats are essential for keeping your skin healthy and strong. Don't hesitate to eat shitload of saturated fat and cholesterol despite what normies say about them. Don't fall for the fear mongering against PUFAs. Both omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids are essential nutrients which the body can't produce on itself. They are the building blocks of cell membranes and help keep the skin hydrated. What in reality matters is keeping the omega3/6 ratio between 1:1 and 1:4.

Collagen
You should aid your body's natural collagen production by making bone broth or supplementing through hydrolized animal collagen peptides. Beef, fish, pork it doesn't really matter, eat as much as you can afford, the more the better. I personnaly consume 20 g of hydrolized beef collagen peptides a day.

Hyaluronic acid
Helps increase skin moisture and reduce dryness. You should get around 100-200mg daily from supplements.

Vitamin A
Promotes skin health by giving certain amount of protection from sunburn and fighting free radicals as an antioxidant. Don't be affraid to megadose it as it seems to clear the skin in high doses. The best natural source of it is liver, doesn't matter from what animal. For reference just 100g of pork liver has 700% of the RDA of vitamin A, talking about nature's superfoods.

Vitamin C
Ascorbic acid is essential for tissue reparation and collagen formation. It is crucial to keep in mind that due to their molecules being so similar, glucose (sugar) competes in absorption with vitamin C:
D9YbcMOWwAAUilI.jpg

What this means in practical terms is the more carbs you eat, the more vitamin C you need as it greatly hinders it's absorption. You can get away with as low as liver's natural ascorbic acid content (around 40mg / 100g) if you eat carnivorous and avoid carbs but otherwise aim for 2-3 gramms per day if you are following a conventional, carbohydrate based diet.


Vitamin D
Helps the skin from premature aging while also plays an integral role in protection and rejuvenation. The lighter your skin, the easier you can synthetise it from sunlight. White guys can get away even with 15 mins of winter sun but if you are black and live in Europe or other northern places you should definitely supplement it exogenously. Fatty oily fish like mackerel and hering are excellent sources to do so.

Vitamin E
A powerful antioxidant which reduces UV damage coming from the sun and helps fighting the inflammation caused by it. Fish and seafood are a good animal sources of it.

Vitamin K
Helps wounds, bruises, stretch marks and cuts to heal. Brightens dark circles, boosts skin elasticity, reduces the appearance of under eye sagging and wrinkles. You don't really have to worry about it since chances are you already eat enough of it. You want to have the K2 variant tho, found in animal sources (K1, the one found in plant foods has dogshit absorption ratio).

Zinc
Has anti-inflammatory effects which makes it effective against acne.Found in meat in abundance.

Water
Consume at least 4-5 liters of water per day to help keep your skin moisturised.

II. Ideal skintone and darkness
Warm skin undertone
The ideal skin tone for men is warm, glowing and orangeish, as opposed to pale and pinkish, seen on the left:
28329_square.jpg


Beta carotene
dreamstime_m_66770579.jpg

A precursor of vitamin A and a carotene which is naturally found in yellow - orange vegetables giving them their iconic color. It makes your skin undertone yellowish. Good food sources include sweet potatoes, carrots and pumpkins, but you can also get it from tablets. I recommend doing a loading phase for 1-2 weeks intaking 100 000 IUs of beta carotene (vitamin A is fat solluble meaning it gets deposited) daily, then maintenance at 25 - 50 000 IUs / day.

Lycopene
Chemical-structure-and-various-source-of-lycopene.png

Also a carotene, which gives red undertone to your skin and makes it glowing when consumed. Found in tomatoes naturally, but you can also take from tablets. I recommend 20mgs / day. Use in combination with beta carotene to achieve warm orange toned skin.

Myself as an example:
View attachment 1437169
The picture on the left shows my original skintone few years ago during wintertime. The pic on the right was taken just now. I haven't done any tanning lately (and haven't gotten any sun either as it's cold December rn in Europe), only been using carotenoids.


Skin darkness
The ideal skin darkness for men is that of olive, light brown or caramel color. Mulattoes and light skin niggas already have this color so if you are one, congratulations, you have nothing to do in this department. Meeks' coloring is perhaps as good as it gets:
jm-1.jpg


Olive skin, common that of Meds is also very good:
936full-jon-kortajarena.jpg


But Nordic and other white guys can achieve it too with a bit of effort, a good example is Swedish model Arvid Hestner:
7e717e026f461542d6bd9900b2f80fd620899207.jpg


If you are South Asian, Middle Eastern / North African, Latino or South East Asian you should avoid darkening your skin any more, but can use carotenoids regardless for glowing skin.

For white guys the skin darkening methods starting from the best to worst are the following:

a) Melanotan
If you want to (semi) permanently darken your skin without raping your collagen and major negative side effects, Melanotan 1 or 2 is the way to go. You can inject it or use it in the form of a nasal spray if you are afraid of needles. Melanotan is especially recommended for gingers and white guys with extremely light Fitzpatrick 1 skin as it not only darkens the skin itself but also hair follicles, leading to a more masculine pheno.
264621439_4913154318715618_7538207169918509101_n.jpg


b) Self tanner
1-tan-questionable-gosling-big-short-gentleman-journal-664x442-c-center.jpg

A much less effective alternative compared to Melanotan. Self tanning creams and sprays darken your epithelium (the outer layer of the skin), which sheds continously, which means the darkening effect goes away very fast, perhaps as short as a week. The color of it can look very fake (bright yellow / orange) if you buy a shitty product, making you a laughning stock. Remove facial & body hair and exfoliate before using a self tanner to prevent uneven spots. Pros of it include saving your collagen and working fast (it darkens you in a few hours).

c) Tanning bed
51312cdcae7e5.image.jpg

Tanning beds give the most natural tan and the effect is instant but that's where their list of pros end. Other than that the UV rays coming from the machines are horrible for your skin, leading to wrinkles over long term and lost of collagen plus they are pricy to use too. Only use one if you need to get a tan as soon as possible and have no other option otherwise.

III. Facial & body hair removal
Non permanent hair removal

a) Epilating
520029-ek647.png

By far the best non permanent hair removal method. Originally women use it as it provides 2-6 weeks of baby smooth skin after one session, but don't let this fool you, if anything it makes more sense for men to use it despite your average normie calling this method faggot. The only downside of it is that it's painful as fuck for the first sessions as the machine works by tearing your hair follicles out of your skin, one by one (it doesn't cause any skin irriation tho). I recommend to use it in the shower with shower cream as the added lotion prevents pain.

b) Waxing
mh-chest-wax-1533759591.png

Works the same way as an epilator does, by removing your hair follicles altogether. A bit less painful than epilating, but it's much more expensive on the long run since it's not a one time purchase, you will have to keep buying waxing tapes or go to a professional.

c) Shaving
By far the shittiest method to remove facial &body hair as it only does so with the part above your skin, which means you will constantly have to shave every few days.
Something like a Philips Bodygroom Series body hair removal device provides fast, painless altough half assed results:
back-body-groom.jpg


If you don't posses any of those for whatever reaso, at least use a safety razor instead of cartridge (as it's a lot cheaper and the single blade means less skin irriation). Be sure to use a non alcoholic aftershave balm afterwards.
bevel-1577744148.jpg


Permanent hair removal

a) Electrolysis
needle.jpg

The most effective yet by far the most expensive and time consuming permanent hair removal method, which works on all skin tones, on all body parts. It removes hair one by one by destroying their growth center with heat. After a very fine probe is inserted into the hair follicle and the hair is removed with tweezers.

b) Laser hair removal
IMG_9540-e1568704982503.jpg

Laser treatment affects hair in the active growth phase (anagen stage). The laser beam is made up of precisely controlled pulses of energy which are absorbed by the melanin or pigment in the hair, reaching into the active hair follicles that lie beneath the skin. Essentially, the energy heats the hair – right down to the bottom of the root – safely destroying it without damaging surrounding tissue or skin. Most people will need a course of between six and eight sessions, after which time the hair will be visibly reduced or permanently removed and the skin will appear smooth and even. Cheaper than electrolysis and each session is only like half an hour.

c) Intense Pulsed Light (IPL)
Can-You-Get-Laser-Hair-Removal-on-Your-Face.jpg

In contrast to laser hair removal it uses a broad spectrum of light with multiple wavelengths. This means it has more unfocused energy around the hair and skin area.” So, IPL uses multi-spectrum lights whereas laser use single spectrum light, “meaning IPL energy is scattered and much weaker. Laser has a densified light, and all energy is focused on this single light. Spectrum lights are measured as wavelength (nm), for example, 755nm wavelength means this spectrum light can penetrate 755nm deep beneath the skin. 755nm wavelength light is best attracted to melanin, so it is best used for hair removal. 532nm means light can reach up to 532nm beneath the skin.

When used for hair removal specifically, IPL usually requires six to eight treatments to see a complete removal of hair in an area. This is dependent, however, on the person's skin colour, hair colour and also the thickness of the hair. IPL technology works best on very light skin combined with dark hair (vampire pheno):
26e5fb277022cbe94be2f86f65ef6488.jpg


IPL is by far the least effective out of the permanent hair removal methods but it's the cheapest and most avaible one as you can buy your own IPL device yourself and do it at home if you want to.
1582217354-philips-lumea-prestige-bri954-crop-1582217320.jpg

IV. Makeup for men
Blemish Balm (BB)
81ytonue+JL._SL1500_.jpg

BB is like a a skin tone tinted moisturiser with extra benefits. These multitasking products can correct redness and discolouration, conceal spots and scars, smooth fine lines and wrinkles, brighten and moisturise, and protect with sun protection filters. They’re practical too, and easier to carry around than the combined products they can sub for: moisturiser, sun screen, concealer. Basically, BBs are a lighter, more man-friendly version of foundation. Make sure to choose one that fits your natural skin tone as close as possible.

Concealer
maxresdefault.jpg

3c3e9f54fafa1424fc5aa10f44558184.jpg



Helps cover dark circles, blemishes, scars, and other imperfections of the face. Using your (clean) finger, take a little bit of concealer from the pot and dot onto any areas you'd like to cover. Remember, a little goes a long way and you can always add more if needed. Using your finger or a slightly damp Face Sponge, blend the concealer by tapping it lightly until it's completely blended in. When blending concealer in, tap the product in rather than dragging it. Use your fourth finger for the lightest touch. Also take care to smooth out any concealer sitting in creases under the eyes. As with BB cream, try to purchase one that fits your skin color.

Contouring
hqdefault.jpg


Personally I haven't tried it, but I am aware of the fact the along with a shitton of filters and digital photo manipulation, prettyboys and models on social media use contouring all the time in order for their face to look more angular and chiselled using different shades of products. Do it at your own will, I personally wouldn't risk getting caught with it irl as my cheeks are decent as they are. I would consider using it when taking photos to post on social media tho.

Regardless of what makeup products you use don't forget to wash it off before going to bed as leaving stuff on your face can lead to irriation and acne breakouts if not careful.


@astatine @TsarTsar444 @Preoximerianas @PingPong @ecstazy @looksmaxxer234 @Htobrother @Z3n @one job away @Lev Peshkov @WannabeJock @Carnivore @roninmaxxer @Lecoteco @FloridaDude
ty for blessing me w this wonderful thread
 

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