Friday, May 14, 2010

Milk of Magnesia: The Secret to a Matte Face?

Shiny Face fix, how to use milk of magnesia as a primer to keep your face matte
Getting a matte face in even the most hot and humid weather is definitely possible. It doesn't take a hard to find primer or a finely milled powder that you can only buy in Paris. Nope. What it takes is a quick visit to your local drugstore for Milk of Magnesia (MoM). Really. You can use Milk of Magnesia as a makeup primer and it will keep your face super matte!

I thought this tip was crazy when I first heard about it as well, but I looked it up on Makeup Alley, where hundreds of girls have written about it in product reviews and on various forums. There are also quite a few YouTube videos about how to do this properly.

I've been doing this for a few weeks. I bought Phillips MoM, but that was because the Walmart brand was out of every size except what appeared to be a full gallon. I didn't want a gallon. It's best to buy the Original flavor, but if you have to buy a flavor make sure that it does not contain Mineral Oil, since this can cause clogged pores and breakouts.

I apply the MoM as soon as my daily moisturizer has fully absorbed. Shake the bottle well and pore a small amount into the plastic cup that comes with the MoM (you don't want to get bacteria into your bottle, so excess from the cup should just be washed down the sink). I dip my finger into the cup and apply a small amount across my nose, onto the center of my cheeks and up onto the center of my forehead. Only apply to the areas that you get oily. I rub in until I can't see it, and then give the MoM a minute or two to dry. Areas that have too much MoM can get a white chalky residue, just rub this off.

You can apply makeup directly over the MoM, but I find that foundation applies more easily if I apply a primer first.

Using Milk of Magnesia has dramatically cut down on shine for me. Much more so than any primer, oil absorbing product or powder ever has in the past. I no longer need to repowder my t-zone during the day, my face stays matte all day long.


Shiny Face fix, how to use milk of magnesia to keep your face matte

10 comments:

Christina said...

Why does it work so well? I also flake on my nose, so would that make it worse?

Marilyn @ Lipgloss and Spandex said...

I'm glad MoM worked for you! I tried it awhile ago, it but it didn't work at all :(

Jean said...

I have never heard of this - thanks for the tip!

On the Glam said...

HUH! I had never heard this before. I can get quite oily in the summer, so I'll definitely have to try this out. Thanks!

Sarah Helfgott said...

Christine-

I currently swear by Murad's Oil-Control Mattifier as a primer and to control shine on my naturally-oily face (http://bit.ly/csBSFG) But the product is not cheap.

After reading your post about Milk of Magnesia, I think I'm going to try using it instead. (I'm assuming that because you can purchase it at drugstores, it's not ridiculously expensive.)

Most people's skin builds up a resistance to mattifiers after a while and I wonder if that happens with MoM, too? I guess I'll just have to try the product for a while and find out!

Thanks for the tip about this product. I'm excited to try it!

-Sarah

Maria said...

Whoa - I am totally going to try this!

Christine said...

I think that Sarah is right- people build up resistances to different mattifiers over time. I'm really not sure how that happens, but I've definitely seen it happen with me.

I decided to try this out and write about it after seeing a few girls discuss this on Makeup Alley's makeup board about a month ago. I had seen discussion on it there years before and had completely forgotten about it! I bet that MoM is discussed or recommended at least once or twice a day on that board. Some of the girls use straight MoM, like me, some found they didn't need so much and would water it down before application. (A little travel nalgene bottle is perfect for storing this in)

The way this works is the way it works for constipation. The Magnesium salt is an osmotic laxative meaning it absorbs things. In the gut it absorbs water, pulling it into your gut and loosening things up in there (ok, it is more complicated than that, but it's the idea). On your skin the salt sucks up the oil produced. But, if you apply too much it can definitely do this to your skin, pulling water out of it (yes, really), drying out your skin.

Christina- I'd be careful using it if you are flaky. MoM can definitely make this worse. Also, are you flaky on the top of your nose or around the folds of your nose? Let me know, I have a video to share with you if it's around the folds. :D If you do decide to give this a shot I'd recommend being one of the girls that mixes the MoM with water to make it easier to get very light coverage.

MissHikerGirl said...

Should I use MoM before or after putting on sunblock?

Kathy said...

Thanks for the post/ I will try this!

Anonymous said...

I dab it on my face where my hair sits - forehead, side of face, jaw line - as that's where I tend to get oily. Works like a charm!

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