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1753 SKINCARE

City Guide

vancouver skincare – rain, sea air and low light

By Christopher Genberg

Vancouver can look wet and soft, but skin often tells a different story. Rainforest climate, sea spray, UV shifts and months of indoor living can leave skin tight, reactive and oddly dry. This is vancouver skincare for real life, not marketing fluff.

vancouver skincare – rain, sea air and low light

Why does skin feel dry in a wet city?

It sounds backwards, but high humidity does not automatically mean happy skin. When weather flips between rain, wind and sudden temperature changes, the barrier gets challenged and water escapes faster than you’d expect. Add salt in the air and UV that still gets through when the clouds open, and you have a neat little stress mix.

Barrier research has long shown that repeated irritation, harsh cleansing and over-exfoliation can increase TEWL, or transepidermal water loss. That is why the old “scrub it clean” advice so often makes skin more reactive, not more resilient. In a place like Vancouver, it makes more sense to support the skin’s own regulation than to bully it into submission.

Then there is the quiet factor: vitamin D. Darker months, heavy cloud cover and more time indoors mean many people get less sun than their skin and body were built around. That is not a call to chase UV, but it is a good reason to keep the routine calm, protective and free from unnecessary aggression.

What should you do instead?

1

Cleanse gently

Choose a cleanser that removes grime without stripping the barrier. Au Naturel Makeup Remover, with MCT oil, is made for that low-drama kind of clean.

2

Cut back on exfoliation

If skin already feels thin or red, it rarely needs more acids. Let the barrier rest for a few days and see whether the tightness eases when you stop pushing it.

3

Protect against weather swings

Wind, rain and temperature changes can trigger dehydration fast. Keep a routine that works on a waterfront walk and at your desk.

4

Think anti-inflammatory

Skin in damp coastal cities often gets annoyed by friction, sweat and too many layers. Fewer steps, better chosen, usually win.

5

Stay consistent

The routine that works is the one you actually repeat. Consistency beats skincare chaos, especially in a climate that changes its mind all day.

How to actually fix it

How to actually fix it

The sensible setup is simple: calm the skin, support the barrier and stop overdoing it. The ONE helps skin stay more regulated with CBD and MCT, while I LOVE brings in CBG with a soothing, antibacterial edge. Together in the DUO kit, you get a full cannabinoid-spectrum approach that makes sense in both humid air and surprise dryness.

For days when skin needs more than the basics, Ta-DA serum is the next logical step. Its antioxidant cocktail with CBG and adaptogens is built for skin living in the real world: weather, city air, stress and uneven sleep. Not magic. Just a better environment for skin that tends to run hot.

1753 ships across Europe and the USA, so the thinking travels well beyond the coast. But if you are in Vancouver, and especially if sea spray and rainforest climate keep pushing your skin from shiny to tight to red, DUO plus Ta-DA is the straight answer. No hype, just a routine that respects the weather instead of fighting it.

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Frequently asked questions

Do I need a heavy cream in Vancouver?

Not necessarily. Many people need barrier support more than a thick cream, especially when skin gets reactive from weather shifts. Oil-based care can go a long way when used consistently.

Is humid air always good for skin?

No. High humidity can help the surface, but wind, salt, temperature swings and irritation can still disrupt the barrier. Skin prefers balance, not just “more moisture.”

What does sea spray do to skin?

Sea spray can leave salt on the skin that feels drying or tight, especially if the barrier is already weak. That is one reason gentle cleansing after coastal air often makes sense.

Is 1753 good for travel too?

Yes. The products are easy to adapt when climate changes, and 1753 ships across Europe and the USA. That makes the routine easy to keep even when life is not.

Sources

  1. 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.
  2. 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.

Swap skin drama for calm

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