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1753 SKINCARE

Sun Care

Physical vs chemical spf – not the fight it’s made out to be

By Christopher Genberg

Sunscreen has become a small religion, but your skin mostly cares about one thing: do you actually wear it. Physical vs chemical spf is less about good versus bad and more about filters, texture and how likely you are to use it every day. The nuance is bigger than slogans like “reef safe” and “natural”.

Physical vs chemical spf – not the fight it’s made out to be

So what really separates the filters?

Physical sunscreen usually relies on mineral filters like zinc oxide and titanium dioxide. They sit on the skin and scatter, plus partly reflect, UV radiation. Chemical filters absorb UV and convert the energy into heat; some formulas use a filter-cascade, where several filters work together for broader coverage and better stability.

This is where the debate tends to get messy. Mineral sounds safer, chemical sounds suspicious, but the reality is more practical: both can work very well when they’re properly formulated and applied in enough product. Studies also suggest that differences in protection often come down more to application, reapplication and film evenness than to the label on the front.

The big downside with many mineral formulas is the feel: a white cast, a dry finish, or a tendency to cling to beard hair and pores. Chemical filters can sting the eyes, feel lighter, yet still irritate sensitive skin. So the real question is not who wins on paper, but which texture you can actually live with on a sunny Tuesday.

How to choose without overthinking it

1

Pick for real life

Are you commuting, exercising, or sitting in strong midday sun? Choose the formula you’ll actually use every morning, not the one that wins arguments online.

2

Read the filter list

Zinc oxide gives broad coverage and often suits sensitive skin. Chemical filters can feel lighter and work well under makeup.

3

Test the eye area

A lot of sunscreen problems show up around the eyes first. Try it for a few days before writing it off, because that’s where “gentle” versus “stingy” becomes obvious.

4

Watch for marketing dogma

“Reef safe” is often used loosely as a marketing phrase. Read the full formula and think about what works for your skin, not just what sounds virtuous.

5

Prioritize consistency

The best SPF is the one you apply generously and reapply. A perfect label matters less than a formula you can actually wear all day.

How to make the smart choice in practice

How to make the smart choice in practice

If you want a simple, sustainable routine, it often makes more sense to put skin-barrier first and filters second. Harsh cleansing, too many acids and a constant chase for “clean” skin often leave the skin more reactive, which makes sunscreen harder to tolerate.

That’s where 1753’s approach fits in: whichever side you land on in physical vs chemical spf, CBD + CBG is a rarely controversial complement for skin that needs calm, not more noise. The ONE brings a skin-regulating oil, I LOVE adds soothing CBG, and the DUO kit gives you a fuller cannabinoid spectrum when you want a routine that stays simple but thoughtful.

For evening removal, Au Naturel Makeup Remover is a gentle way to take off the day without scrubbing your face into submission. It’s not magic, just better logic: mild cleansing, a steadier skin barrier and sunscreen you’ll actually want to use again tomorrow.

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Frequently asked questions

Is physical sunscreen always better for sensitive skin?

Not always. Zinc oxide is often perceived as gentler, but the formula matters a lot. A well-made chemical sunscreen can work better for some people because it feels lighter and therefore gets used more consistently.

What does reef safe actually mean?

The term is often used without a strict standard. Some filters are discussed more than others in environmental conversations, but it’s worth looking at the whole formula and how relevant the issue is to your actual lifestyle.

Is titanium better than zinc oxide?

Titanium dioxide protects well against UVB and partly against UVA, while zinc oxide usually offers broader UVA coverage. For many people, zinc oxide is the more complete option, but both can be good depending on the formula and finish.

Why does chemical SPF feel better sometimes?

Chemical filters can give a thinner, more invisible finish and sit well under makeup. For many people, that texture is exactly what makes them apply enough and reapply when needed.

Choose sunscreen you’ll actually wear

Skip the dogma and find a formula that fits your skin, your day and your pace.