City Guide
Eskilstuna skincare – for skin fighting Mälardalen weather
Eskilstuna is easy to live in, but not always easy on skin. Inland Sweden means cold snaps, low humidity, winter wind and long stretches of indoor heating that leave the barrier tight, dull and reactive. Add soft water and everyday UV exposure on bright days, and the case for simpler skincare gets pretty clear.

Why does skin feel drier here?
In an inland climate like Eskilstuna’s, skin has to handle cold and dry air at the same time. As temperatures drop, the skin’s lipid barrier works less efficiently and transepidermal water loss rises, which is why tightness, flaking and redness show up so fast. It’s not weakness; it’s overload.
The usual response is more cleansing, more acids and more actives. But an irritated barrier rarely improves when you keep piling on friction. Research on barrier function keeps pointing in the same direction: when lipids are depleted and the skin is already stressed, it becomes more reactive and loses moisture faster.
Soft water can make cleansing feel harmless, which is exactly why people often wash too long or too often. Then winter air, indoor heat and low humidity do the rest. The question is not how much your skin can take. It’s how little it needs to stay calm and resilient.
Five things that help now
Wash more gently
Swap harsh, foaming cleansers for something milder and shorter-contact. Clean skin does not need to feel squeaky.
Seal in moisture
Apply skincare on slightly damp skin so water does not evaporate so quickly. In dry air, that small habit matters a lot.
Choose calming fats
When wind and cold hit, skin often prefers formulas that support the barrier instead of stripping it further.
Pause over-exfoliating
If your skin already feels tight, it is usually not begging for another acid. Give the barrier a calmer week.
Respect UV all year
Bright winter days and snow reflection still count. UV is not a summer-only issue, especially when skin is already under climate stress.

How to actually solve it
For eskilstuna skincare, you do not need a dramatic routine. You need a routine that helps the barrier do its job. The ONE, our CBD face oil with MCT, is built to calm skin and help it feel less exposed when the air is dry and the temperature keeps swinging.
If your skin is stressed, red or easily irritated, I LOVE – our CBG serum – is the obvious next step. In the DUO kit, The ONE and I LOVE give you the full cannabinoid spectrum in a routine that makes sense whether it is minus five or grey and damp outside. No theatre, just support.
Want an extra layer of antioxidant backup? Ta-DA serum fits naturally. It works across climates, and that is the point: 1753 ships across Europe and the USA, but skin still responds to the same basics everywhere – calm, barrier support and formulas that do not pick a fight with the skin.
Products we recommend

Save €34DUO kit
Two face oils, one for morning and one for evening. Simple skincare that works with your skin, not against it.


TA-DA Serum
A CBG-powered serum that seals in moisture and adds glow, whatever the season.


Au Naturel Makeup Remover
A cleansing oil with MCT and CBD that removes makeup and buildup without stripping your skin bare.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need different skincare in winter?
Usually, yes. Cold air and low humidity increase water loss from the skin, so many people need gentler cleansing and more barrier support.
Is soft water good for skin?
Soft water can feel nicer, but it does not mean your skin can handle harsher routines. In dry climates, keeping things simple is still the smart move.
Can I use facial oil if I’m sensitive?
Yes, if the formula is designed well. A calming oil like The ONE can help reduce that tight, exposed feeling without overloading the skin.
Why does my skin feel worse indoors?
Indoor heating lowers humidity, so skin loses water faster. That is why winter skin often feels drier inside than outside, even when it is freezing.
Sources
- Prescott SL, Larcombe DL, Logan AC, et al. The skin microbiome: impact of modern environments on skin ecology, barrier integrity, and systemic immune programming. World Allergy Organ J 2017;10(1):29.
- Araviiskaia E, Berardesca E, Bieber T, et al. The impact of airborne pollution on skin. J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2019;33(8):1496–1505.
Article reviewed by Christopher Genberg, founder of 1753 SKINCARE.
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