Many people with extremely fair or dark skin complain that BB cream colors just don't work for them -- especially if that particular BB is only available in one "universal" shade. While I haven't found that CC creams have more color options, they do blend more easily, which means the shades that are available can work for more people.
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Skin care benefits
The only thing better than makeup with skin care benefits is makeup with even more skin care benefits than anything else on the market, and that's exactly what CC creams are trying to accomplish. The Olay CC cream targets hyperpigmentation, wrinkles, and blotchiness, and claims long-term spot-diminishing benefits. Many of the CC creams from Asia are packed with antioxidants like white tea and green tea, and the Rachel K version even has epidermal growth factor, which stimulates collagen production by speeding up your skin's natural exfoliation.
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The CC creams you can try now
If you read this story a week from now, there may be six new CC creams I could include here. However, at this moment there are only two that are readily available in the U.S.
The first is Olay Total Effects CC Tone Correcting UV Moisturizer, $21.50, which just rolled out in drugstores. It has enough color to brighten up my skin without covering my freckles, and it leaves me feeling moisturized all day. It comes in three colors, and because the coverage is so minimal, it should work for every skin tone.
The second is Wei East Wei To Go Beauty Ideal Skin, $30, which also comes in three shades. It provides more coverage than your average BB cream, and this one comes in super-convenient re-sealable travel packets.
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Asian imports
If you're planning a trip to Asia or don't mind paying astronomical shipping fees, you may be able to track down one of the original CC creams. The Rachel K CC Cream is the bestselling formula is Asia, and has SPF 35+, tons of amazing skin care ingredients (like the aforementioned epidermal growth factor), better coverage with a lighter texture than a BB cream, and two shades.
Then there's Chanel CC Cream Color Correction Complete, which is basically the Holy Grail of CC creams. (I spotted one on eBay for a fleeting second, and still wish I bit the bullet and splurged.) There's no word when -- or even if -- Chanel will bring this product to the States, but I (and every beauty editor I know) is campaigning hard.
Now that you've got the 411 on CC creams, find out which BB creams Total Beauty editors love.
The biggest beauty product trend I can remember in my eight-plus-year career (and many more makeup-obsessed years prior to becoming a beauty editor) is BB creams. Just about every beauty company in the world spent the last 12 months formulating and then launching one of these tinted multi-taskers otherwise known as "beauty balms."
Then, a few months ago, I started hearing whispers among big players in the beauty biz about another hot skin care trend coming out of Asia -- a cream that would do the BB one better. The obvious name for such a product? The CC cream.
But CC isn't just an arbitrary name cooked up by a beauty executive with a preschooler at home. CC stands for "color correcting," because that's exactly what it's designed to do: even and brighten the color of your complexion. (Of course, that's the primary function of BB creams as well. But I digress.)
While the CC cream phenomenon is still in its infancy, Olay won the metaphorical race and launched the first one in the United States this October. And I think it's safe to assume that many companies will be following suit and coming out with their own CC creams in 2013.
After trying just about every BB cream available, I spent the last few weeks playing with the new Olay Color Correcting cream and as many of the best CC creams from Asia that I could get my hands on. And I'm breaking down the noticeable differences between BB creams and CC creams -- they're subtle, but they're there. Here's what you need to know to be a step ahead of the CC cream trend. You know, before a DD cream comes out.