top of page

 

Dull Skin

when the skin looses its brightness 

What is Dull Skin?

Skin that lacks brightness, looks tired and dry is considered dull skin.

 

What Causes Dull Skin?

​

There are several factors that causes the skin to look dull. When we are young, our skin sheds its cells every 30 days. However, as we get older this extends up to every 60 days. The natural decrease in cell turnover can cause a build-up of dead skin cells and a dull looking complexion.  Besides the skins natural ageing process, factors such as drinking alcohol, smoking, having a poor diet, exposure to sunlight can all lead to lacklustre looking skin.

 

Why does dull skin look grey?

​

The appearance of grey skin is superficial. This can be down to the fact that the skin is dehydrated, tired or scarred. All these concerns can be treated topically. 

​

Treatment Options

​

At Vanity Aesthetics & Beauty, we offer a number of specialised treatments to help clear dull skin.

​​

  • Facials and regular skincare routine 

  • Microdermabrasion

  • Microneedling

  • Laser Resurfacing

​

Prescriptive facials

​

Being pampered by our therapist using natural ingredients at high doses in a combination prescribed individually for you. Now you can enjoy your relaxing facial while benefiting from clinically proven products.

Chemical peels

​

The treatment involves applying a non toxic chemical to the skin to encourage cell turnover and the exfoliation process. As dead skin cells are removed, skin appears clearer and more radiant.  You can choose from a light peel for healthier skin at no downtime, to a deep peel for a radical change of your skin condition.

Vampire Facial

​

Your blood contains a lot of growth factors for the healing and rejuvenating process. Vampire facial is a procedure that draws you blood to extract these growth factors, then injects these growth factors back on your facial skin. These growth factors will then put the cells on your facial skin in regenerating mode, creating more collagen and more new born healthy cells.

​

bottom of page