Disneyhabs
barcode avatar is my BBM disney channel have a loo
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2014
My dri fit tennis shorts and t shirt and runners.
Regarding sunscreen, I'm very fair and my DH is fairish, the spray on sun screen is a dream, it lets you get everywhere without taking 20 minutes to apply, we actually like the Target brand 72 spf best and its very affordable, most of all, it doesn't clog up the nozzle like some others do but the spray variety is darn handy.
My guy and I are the same way (and we have tattoos we don't want to fade!). We spray each other down pretty frequently with 100spf while at the parks and while we're both pretty pale, neither of us have gotten a burn in our past 2 trips!
I can't say we notice a difference but we figure there's no harm! Go big or go home right?Have you found a difference between 50+ spf and 100 spf? I honestly buy whatever the top spf is at the place I'm at the moment in the brand I like, but I can tell no difference in the spray on sun screen between 50 and 100. We do use good dermatologist stuff for our faces so that's a bit different... Just curious about this and wondering if I'm the only one? I CAN tell a difference between 30ish and 50ish though...
My guy and I are the same way (and we have tattoos we don't want to fade!). We spray each other down pretty frequently with 100spf while at the parks and while we're both pretty pale, neither of us have gotten a burn in our past 2 trips!
Sunscreen is a sticky wicket because like a PP mentioned people automatically assume that if the number is higher, it is better. Well, SPF math is weird. Most sunscreens with an SPF of 15 or higher do an excellent job of protecting against UVB - the burn causing ray (UVA - cancer causing ray) Sun Protection Factor (SPF) is the sunscreen's ability to prevent UVB from damaging the skin. If it takes 20 minutes for your unprotected skin to start turning red, using SPF 15 sunscreen, in theory, prevents reddening 15 times longer about five hours. Like I said - in theory...there's interfering factors like application, type (spray, cream), etc.
SPF 15 filters out approximately 93 percent of all incoming UVB rays. SPF 30 keeps out 97 percent and SPF 50 keeps out 98 percent. So, it isn't double. Using anything higher than 50 won't give you more protection, just cost more money. However, while they may seem like negligible differences, you are light-sensitive, or have a history of skin cancer, those extra percentages could make a difference. No sunscreen is 100% blocking and regardless of strength, should not be expected to stay effective longer than two hours without reapplication. Reddening of the skin is a reaction to UVB rays alone and tells you very little about UVA damage you may be getting. Plenty of damage can be done without the red flag of sunburn being raised. People forget that. They think, I'm not burnt - YAY, no damage.
So, the BEST advice is to make sure your sunscreen is broadspectrum -- says it blocks UVA & UVB and for FL, water-resistant, sports type are less likely to sweat off, but still need reapplied. Don't believe the label that says lasts 12 hours! Bull Hockey!