AT A GLANCE
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WHAT IT IS
Gommage is a form of exfoliation that is gentler and safer for your skin. -
WHAT IT DOES
Gommage helps exfoliate your skin without thinning out or creating small tears on its surface. The gel-like consistency will attach to the dead skin cells and after a few minutes, the friction between your hands and the gel will release from the surface of the skin leaving you with a soft, glowing layer. -
HOLY GRAIL PRODUCT
Gommage Exfoliating Gel
What's The Deal With Gommage?
By Allie White, originally posted on Free People
How do you exfoliate your face? Believe it or not, there are many people who don't know where to start or even how to exfoliate! Despite the fact that it sounds like a fancy French cheese, gommage is actually a brilliant approach to exfoliating your skin, and IMHO it’s one not enough people know about. Not only is it uber-effective at all things smoothing, polishing and dead-skin removing, but it also manages to be incredibly gentle and fun to use. Haven’t convinced you in the last 100 words? Let’s dive in and see if we can’t change your mind.
What is gommage?
Once again, not a cheese. But it does come from the French word for “erase.” Yes, it does “erase” dead skin cells but the real reason behind the name is because the act of using a gommage product is similar to erasing with a pencil. (More on that later.)
Is Gommage good for your skin?
Exfoliation is abrasive and sometimes it strip off the skin's essential oils, on the other hand, gommage are safer, less intense, and thus better for your skin. Some even say that this is the most effective and best way to exfoliate dead skin cells. Unlike harsh physical exfoliants, gommage doesn’t create tiny tears or thin your skin over continuous usage.
What is Gommage motion?
The process of performing circular motions of massaging on your skin after applying gommage and letting it sit for a minute or two is the gommage motion. Once the gommage gel or cream sits on the face, it slowly mixes with the dead skin cells and as you massage in a circular motion, the dry and dead cells along with the gommage come off.
What is the difference between a Gommage and a scrub?
Scrubs usually involve the use of fine yet granular particles, which are abrasive in nature. These materials physically scrub away the dead skin cells and impurities from skin. However, on the longer run, these cause tiny tears to skin’s surfaces, speeds up ageing, and also puts skin at the risk of damage. Gommage, on the other hand, typically comes in the form of gels or creams that you apply to your face. And, as the product dries, you can massage it and remove it off as it peels. The product binds to dead skin cells and impurities on the skin’s surface to give you clearer and exfoliated skin.
Another important difference is that gommage gives a subtler and gradual exfoliation where the changes will be seen over a while, whereas scrubs give you immediate gratification.
What is gommage exfoliant?
Think of gommage as a kinder, gentler exfoliant not made of abrasive fruit pits or ocean-clogging microbeads. One that won’t have your aesthetician scolding you for over-scrubbing or thinning your skin or creating tiny tears or speeding up the aging process. Some may say its the best non-abrasive face exfoliator from their experience.
What is a Gommage exfoliating?
Now that you know gommage is similar to exfoliation, you need to know that gommage is also a simpler, more efficient, safer alternative to conventional physical exfoliation. With no tiny beads or abrasive particles, gommage exfoliating is a process of erasing dead skin cells from your face to reveal a glowing and healthy skin.
How do gommage peels work?
What makes gommage so gentle is the fact that it starts out as a cream, paste or liquid—no solids in sight. After cleansing your skin, you apply the product and let it sit for a few seconds to dry. Then you get to rubbing.
Just like you get pink rubber flakes as you erase something, the act of rubbing your fingers against your skin (and in turn the product) causes the gommage to pill and rub off—taking a bunch of dead skin cells with it. That’s right: it clings to your outermost dead skin cells and like a lint roller for your face, picks ‘em up and rolls them away via the pilled gommage. No splashing water all over your skin as you try to remove a mask that’s been sitting on your skin, no ruining towels scrubbing flakes off your hair line, no having to wash your hair even though you were planning on doing the whole three-day-old-top knot thing because you can’t pick the stubborn mask out of your hairline. No more!
The science behind gommage is actually kind of brilliant. The formulas combine chemical exfoliation (thanks, enzymes!) with mechanical exfoliation (thanks, rubbing of hands against skin!). Since the enzymes dissolve protein, they eat up the dead skin cells that sit on the surface of your skin and then take them for a ride down the drain once everything is rubbed off.
All that stuff sloughing off your skin? A combination of the product and dead skin. Since another part of that brilliant formula causes the product to solidify and separate when mixed with oxygen and oil, the oxygen- and oil-rich surface of your face makes it the perfect place for gommage to get to work, all without any tingling, burning or scrubbing with a cloth to get the last dried bits off.
How to use gommage?
Here’s the fun part. Like I said before, only use this stuff on cleansed, makeup-free skin. Apply a thin layer of the product to your face or body and let it sit for about 10 seconds. Then start to gently massage your skin until those ultra-satisfying little white balls and flakes start to form. You don’t have to worry about over-scrubbing here—the worst you can do is get overzealous with the rubbing and then the whole thing is over before you know it. Just remember to keep at it until all of the product is removed. Then stand back and gaze at your soft, smooth, plumped up skin.
Seriously, this stuff is instant skin gratification in a bottle. It’s truly astounding the difference you’ll immediately notice in the texture and brightness of your skin, not to mention how the prime canvas you’ve just created for any other products to really sink in and penetrate.
If I may be so bold, gommage is just as (if not more) satisfying than squeezing your blackheads in a magnifying mirror. (Not that you should be picking at your skin like this! Stay away from magnifying mirrors!) There’s just something about watching your dead skin ball up and roll away that’s kind of mesmerizing.
And since your skin is soft and radiant and the whole thing only took about 20 seconds, you may go enjoy some French cheese. Au revoir.
How to use a Gommage peel?
Gommage can be applied on your face in three easy steps. First, take some product on your fingertips and apply it to your cleansed face all over. Wait for a minute or two for the product to stick to the face, and then in gentle circular motions slowly massage the product in and the product will roll and fall away from your skin. Keep doing this until all the product clears out of your face and neck. Wipe the face with dry brush, if needed. Don’t rinse. You can do this in the evenings and apply your serums after.
How often should you exfoliate your face?
A controversial skincare question! Generally, you should exfoliate your face 1-2 times a week but it depends on your skin type. If you're oily and acne-prone, we recommend gommaging your face twice a week! For a deeper exfoliation, follow up with an AHA like our Glow to Go Glycolic Acid Peel Pads. This will allow all of your amazing serums, oils, and moisturizers to absorb even deeper!
How often should I use Gommage?
While it is advisable to use a gommage one to two times a week in the night time, depending on your skin sensitivity and needs you can also do that thrice a week or once in two weeks. However, unlike face washes or cleansers, daily usage of gommage isn’t necessary. If you are using Sonage’s Gommage Exfoliating Gel and have normal skin, then you can use it once a week; and use it twice a week if you have acne-prone or combination skin. The gel may also be used as a hydrating mask. After cleansing, you can apply a thick layer and leave on for 20 minutes. Rinse with water.
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