Spa Day at Home
Want to relax your body and mind without leaving the comfort
of your own home? Escape from everyday stress with these great
home spa ideas that promise to rejuvenate, and renew your natural
beauty.
What you’ll need most is time – set aside at least one to two
hours to enjoy your at-home treatments.
Set the Mood
Wendy and Sergio Cocchia, owners of Absolute Spa Group (the company
which owns Absolute Spa at the Century Plaza Hotel), in Vancouver,
BC, know that the key to looking great is feeling great! So, in
making your home spa a pleasurable experience, they suggest getting
creative and incorporating what you find relaxing into your bathroom:
Buy
a luxurious bathrobe or extra plush towel and save it to use for
your home spa treatments.
Spray your favorite perfume or your significant others’ cologne
in the air for an aromatic experience.
Light a scented candle you love.
Play a CD that you find relaxing and soothing.
Make Your Own Herbal Bath
Use
herbs or essential oils for a scent-sational soak in the tub that
will melt away your worries and get you ready for your day of
pampering. Rosemary Gladstar, author of Herbs for Natural Beauty
(Random House, 1999, $12.75) raves about the calming effects of
a lavender, oatmeal and rose herbal bath.
To make: Grab a handful of each of the ingredients (or substitute
a few of your favorite dried scents), tie them up in a handkerchief
or cheesecloth and hang it from your bath faucet. Now sit back
and relax, allowing the water to run through your homemade potpourri
of herbs.
Luxurious Locks
Here is a great hair conditioning treatment:
- Mash 1 avocado (recommended for its hydrating benefits and
proteins) and mix with 1-tablespoon lemon juice, 1 teaspoon
of sea salt, and 1 tablespoon of pure aloe (you can take it
from an aloe plant or ask your pharmacist or natural food store)
until it becomes a paste.
- Comb through hair with your fingertips.
Cover hair with a plastic shower cap or bag, and wrap a towel
around it to seal in the treatment.
- Leave in for 20-30 minutes and enjoy a great book, CD or
even better – just savour the peace and quiet!
- Unwrap you newly conditioned locks. Rinse, shampoo and rinse
again for soft, luxurious hair!
The Face Off
Brent Krausher, co-owner of Interlude Spa Retreat in Dartmouth,
Nova Scotia stresses the benefit of prepping your skin before
any facial treatment. “For any skin regime to be effective and
provide visible results, proper skin preparation is essential
especially if you’re using products that contain AHA’s (alpha
hydroxy) or fruit acids, which penetrate the skin’s deeper layers.”
Owners of Absolute Spa at the Century Plaza Hotel in Vancouver,
BC suggest these simple steps to prepare your skin for your chosen
at home treatment:
Steam
your face. You can do this by simply standing in the
shower for an extra minute or two. This will help to open your
pores and improve the effectiveness of your chosen facial treatment.
Cleanse your face to remove bacteria and use a sensitive skin
toner such as Johnson’s pH 5.5 Cleansing Lotion and Toners, to
return skin to its natural 5.5 pH balance.
A Mask for all Faces:
Once you’ve prepped your face try one of these great masks depending
on your skin type.
Deep
Cleansing Masks – Clay or mud based masks are great for
oily or combination skin types. These masks purify and deep cleanse,
bring impurities to the surface and help to firm up the skin.
To Make a Mud Mask - Combine equal parts of
cosmetic clay (available at your local natural food store) and
water (or bottled spring water for more minerals), adding a drop
of your favorite essential oil before mixing. Mix until it becomes
a paste. Apply as needed, leaving on for 10 minutes. Rinse off
and pat face dry.
Fruit Masks – These are great for all skin
types. Fruit and its extracts are full of AHAs (especially papaya
and apple), which when applied help exfoliate the skin and enhance
water absorption which softens the skin. Aromatherapy (Bloomsbury
Publishing, 1997, $19.95) by Chrissie Wildwood suggests some great,
easy-to-make fruit masks to try at home!
To Make A Papaya Facial – Mash up a fresh papaya
and sieve into a bowl. Pat onto clean skin, leaving on for 10-15
minutes and then rinse with warm water, followed by cold water
to close pores. Great for all skin types.
To Make An Apple Facial – Rub a slice of raw
apple onto face after cleansing and leave for 10-15 minutes. Rinse
with warm and then cold water. Great for normal to oily skin types.
Banana Supreme Facial – Nancy Simpson, Spa
Director at Ste. Anne’s Country Inn & Spa in Grafton, ON,
recommends an all-natural facial for dry skin that is both nourishing
and moisturizing. Mash bananas until paste like, add honey if
desired (which will nourish skin) and smooth over skin. Let sit
for 10 minutes and rinse with cool water.
For more great at-home facial ideas, check out Asian Secrets
of Health, Beauty, and Relaxation by Sophie Benge, photography
by Luca Invernizzi Tettoni. (Tuttle Publishing, 2000, $38.95).
Here are two simple and effective kitchen cosmetic recipes from
the book to whip up in no time.
Egg White Mask (Tightening for a lackluster complexion)
1 egg
Break open the egg and separate the white from the yolk. Beat
the white for one minute by hand. Gently apply to the skin and
let it harden. Wash off with warm water. The egg white draws toxins
from the skin’s surface and tightens the pores as it cleans.
Lemon Refresher (Slightly astringent and tightening
for the skin)
1 lemon or lime
1/2 tsp cold water
Mix the lemon or lime juice and the water in a bowl. Gently pat
on to your face after any cleansing and refreshing facial. The
lemon/lime’s acidity acts as a toner to tighten the skin and close
the pores after a facial. It smells great too!
Easy on the Eyes
To relieve puffiness, reduce fine lines and revitalize the sensitive
skin around the eyes, Wendy Cocchia of Absolute Spa in Vancouver,
BC suggests using cold compresses. Anything cool will work well.
Also try:
Cotton Balls doused with cold water for an inexpensive solution.
Cucumber slices, which will help to soothe tired and/or puffy
eyes.
Absolute Spa’s Orange and/or Kiwi eye pads. The orange works well
to invigorate, while the kiwi helps to relax.
Ste. Anne’s Country Inn & Spa also recommends using herbal
tea bags to soothe tired eyes. Brew your favorite herbal variety
in cold water for a couple of minutes, then rinse the tea bags
out a little and rest them on eyes for a relaxing and aromatic
stress reliever.
Hands and Feet
Make your hands and feet feel fabulous with these suggestions
from Absolute Spa in Vancouver, BC.
Fill
a large metal basin with very warm water adding a capful of your
favorite cleanser or bubble bath. You can also add 5-6 drops of
essential oil (diluted in a couple of teaspoonfuls of vegetable
oil, honey, or cider vinegar). Try camomile, which helps ease
aches and pains or rosemary which promotes circulation. Then,
soak your feet or hands in the basin for 20 minutes. Remove and
pat dry.
File and buff fingernails. For feet, exfoliate by using a pumice
stone to slough off any rough skin. Cut toenails (straight across
to prevent ingrown toenails) and file with an emery board.
Ease into cuticle care by applying good old olive oil to soften
cuticles. Be gentle when pushing cuticles back – the skin is very
tender. And don’t cut your cuticles!
To moisturize and lock in softness – massage a good, thick moisturizing
cream onto feet and/or hands, wrap with saran wrap and put on
some socks and/or mitts to seal in the benefits (the warmth created
from insulating your hands and feet helps to penetrate the moisture
deep into your skin). After about ten minutes, remove the layers
and rub in remaining lotion.
Do a final buff, apply polish (or for natural nail shine – rub
petroleum jelly onto nails) and you’re ready to go.
By Amberley McGowan
as published by TodaysParent.com