1. Get an Early
Start
Make a habit of washing your face a few hours before bed. If you
wait until you're tired, you're more likely to blow it off
-- allowing "toxins and dirt to stay on there all night,"
says dermatologist Laurie Polis of N.Y.C. Another consequence? You
miss the best time to treat your skin. "At night there's
more blood flow to the skin's surface, and there's nothing
else on your face to interfere with absorption," Polis
says.
Try: Neutrogena Deep Clean Relaxing nightly
cleanser, $7; at drugstores.
2. Sleep on Your Back
Note to Audrey Hepburn fans: Lying on your stomach is bad for
"beauty sleep." The average head weighs 7 to 8 pounds --
a lot of pressure to be putting on your face every night. In fact,
many dermatologists say they can tell what side of the face people
sleep on by the number of wrinkles there.
3. Get a Lift
Sleep with your head elevated on two pillows, or put the headrest
area of your bed on 2- to 4-inch pieces of wood. Gravity helps
lymph and blood flow so fluid won't accumulate, Polis says.
4. Save Money, Not Wrinkles
At night you don't need to worry about eye treatments smearing
your makeup, so slather on the richest formula you can. Polis
swears by Aquaphor: "It conditions lashes and hydrates the
delicate eye skin really well."
Try: Aquaphor Healing ointment, $9; drugstore.com.
5. Sneak a Glow
Mix a drop of self-tanner into your night cream or use a cream that
contains a bit of tan-producing DHA.
Try: Clarins Radiance-Plus self-tanning cream,
$52; clarinsusa.com.
6. Avoid Carb Face
To wake with defined cheekbones, eat a high-protein, low-sugar
dinner (try salmon and asparagus, a natural diuretic). Skip the
rice, pasta and potatoes. "When our diet's high in
glycemic carbohydrates, our features take on a soft, doughy
appearance," says Connecticut dermatologist Nicholas
Perricone.
7. Wrap It Up
To minimize A.M. frizz, sleep on a satin pillowcase or put your
hair in a silk scarf. "Those fabrics are much softer than
cotton, so there's less friction," says Harry Josh, a John
Frieda stylist.
8. Find Your Inner Ballerina
Pile hair into a twist on the top of your head (use a scrunchie to
avoid crimping). "In the morning you'll have major volume
and beautiful waves," Josh says.
9. Turn on the Hair Conditioning
Sleep with a moisturizing treatment in damp hair overnight. We like
Philip B. Katira Hair Masque, but any rich conditioner will do.
Rinse in the morning.
Try: Philip B. Katira Hair Masque, $40; philipb.com.
10. Pop a Rooster Pill
Trust us, we were skeptical. But after swallowing two Wake Up on
Time pills at 11 P.M., we found it much easier to get out of bed
seven hours later. Created by a sleep-deprived single mother, the
pills contain an energizing blend of thiamin, riboflavin, niacin,
vitamins B6 and B12 and guarana-seed extract. It's formulated
with a coating that releases ingredients into your bloodstream
toward the end of your last sleep cycle, so you wake up feeling
clear-headed, not fuzzy.
Try: Wake Up On Time, $30/40 tablets; wakeupontime.com.
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