4 comments

  • emptybits 58 minutes ago
    Bemotrizinol is the ingredient being discussed.

    If you're looking for a specific product to try, check out Ombrelle and also La Roche-Posay's Anthelios line. I share this as a Canadian (bemotrizinol has been available here for years), but check the ingredients because it may vary by country because of regulations.

    Aside: I did a bunch of sunscreen research some time ago for my family. I like the non-absorbing/non-reactive aspect of mineral screens but settled on a chemical screen and bemotrizinol seemed favoured but we landed instead on the Kinesys brand of sprays which we love because they're very waterproof and sweatproof in our experience but they feel like almost nothing. YMMV.

    • jzig 44 minutes ago
      Thank you for sharing your experience. Any idea If I search for Kinesys spray product on the American Amazon site will it be the same? What are the active ingredients?
  • erelong 41 minutes ago
    certain long clothes allows for skipping sunscreen entirely in perpetuity
    • bawolff 15 minutes ago
      Unless you are talking about a Burqa, i think that is not true.
    • andrew_lettuce 15 minutes ago
      This isn't realistic for something likeriding your bike where you get lots of sun on your face and limbs.
    • OptionOfT 23 minutes ago
      Your clothes still need to have a certain SPF, and you're not gonna wear gloves when 100 outside are you?
      • gibspaulding 10 minutes ago
        Just about any shirt is going to have a higher spf/upf than any normal sunscreen. Also who puts sunscreen on their hands??

        A long sleeve sunshirt with a hood or better yet a floppy hat is where it’s at. I have a couple of the Colombia PFG ones that I wear for working outside, though I’d like to see if I can find something cotton instead since I’m not a huge fan of synthetic fibers.

        • hilariously 9 minutes ago
          I put sunscreen on my hands or I will have completely burnt hands. There's many of us who cant have more than about an hour in direct sunlight (and sometimes much less) before redness and soon burning occurs.
        • XorNot 6 minutes ago
          While generally true, it's worth remembering that thin shirts can have an SPF as low as 50 or so, which isn't much.
          • hollerith 3 minutes ago
            It means only 2% of the harmful rays (UVA) are getting through the shirt or alternatively you can spend 50 times as long in the sun as you could if you went shirtless.
  • fhdkweig 1 hour ago
    This topic has been posted at about the same time in another thread, but neither has any comments

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48523165

  • ChrisArchitect 1 hour ago
    Previously: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48507024

    and related large discussion this week:

    European sunscreens are safer than American (2024)

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48503940