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By Honest Health

The reason my age spots kept coming back, and the soap bar that finally broke it

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Margaret Whitfield
Published by Margaret Whitfield | Guest Writer
Last Update: Jan 12

I'm Margaret, sixty one, and I live in Harrogate.

If you are reading this you are probably where I was eighteen months ago.

A few spots on your hands, maybe one or two on your cheeks, one on your chest you noticed in a holiday photo and have not stopped noticing since.

They get bigger every summer. They never get smaller.

You have tried things. You have read the same Facebook threads I read. You have bought the cream from Boots that everyone swears by. Maybe you have paid for an IPL session that worked for three months before the spots came back, sometimes darker than before. Maybe you have asked your GP for hydroquinone and stopped after a few weeks because your skin could not take it.

I sent this text to a friend last winter:

I've used hydroquinone in the past, and while it worked, the spot came back soon as i stopped. I don't know what to do.
14:32

And after all of that, you have the same quiet question I had.

Why do they keep coming back? Why does every cream fade them for a few weeks and then watch them return? Why does the expensive treatment only last a season?

I want to tell you what I learned, because once I understood the answer, the next product I tried actually worked. It has been fourteen months and the spots have not come back.

1. The actual reason why your age spots keep coming back
1. The actual reason why your age spots keep coming back

The reason has nothing to do with the products being weak.

Age spots are not stains on your skin. They are made underneath it, deep in the bottom layer, by cells called melanocytes. When those cells get triggered by years of sun, they switch on an enzyme called tyrosinase, which produces pigment that rises to the surface and clumps together. That clump is what you see in the mirror.

Every time the sun hits that same patch, the enzyme switches back on. New pigment rises. The spot you thought you had faded comes back exactly where it was.

That is the Pigment Loop. And that is why creams that work on the surface fade the spot for a few weeks before watching it return. They are mopping the floor while the tap is still running.

2. The three things that have to happen to actually stop them
2. The three things that have to happen to actually stop them

To break the loop you have to do three things at the same time.

1. Slow the enzyme deep down so the cells stop producing new pigment.

2. Neutralise the triggers at the surface so the enzyme does not get switched back on the second you stop.

3. Lift what is already there so the spot you can see gets thinner over time.

Most products do one of the three. Hydroquinone slows the enzyme but irritates the skin around it. Vitamin C alone neutralises the triggers but cannot reach what is underneath. Glycolic peels lift the surface but do nothing to stop new pigment rising up.

What I had not found, until that point, was anything that did all three at once.

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The bar that works from the inside out
3. How to reach the enzyme production deep in your skin
3. How to reach the enzyme production deep in your skin

Here is the part nobody told me. When you step into a hot shower, the steam opens up your pores for about ten minutes. In that window your skin is the most receptive it will be all day, and actives go deeper than they ever would on dry skin in the evening.

Once I knew about it, the question changed. It was no longer which serum is strongest. It was what can I get onto my skin in those ten minutes, every morning, without thinking about it.

A bar of soap, as it turned out, was the answer.

Alpha Arbutin slows the enzyme that produces the pigment. Vitamin C neutralises the triggers that switch it back on. Kaolin Clay and Turmeric lift what is already at the surface as you wash. Three pathways at once, in the two minutes when your skin is most ready to absorb.

That is the part the cream from Boots could never do. Not because it was a bad cream. Because my pores had been closed for hours by the time I patted it on at night.

4. What happened over nine months
4. What happened over nine months

The first three weeks, nothing visible happened. I almost stopped.

What kept me going was something I had not expected. My skin started feeling different long before it started looking different. The patches of redness around my nose were gone by week two. My skin felt calmer than it had in years.

By week five the spot on my left cheek had a softer edge. Not gone. Softer. By week eight it was lighter than the skin around it.

By month four my granddaughter Lily sat in my lap to read. She traced the back of my hand without stopping to ask about it. I did not realise that until later, in the kitchen, when I noticed I had not been hiding them.

It is now nine months. They have not come back.

5. The real reason why I eventually tried it
5. The real reason why I eventually tried it

Milde & Co offers sixty days money back with no need to return the bar.

The reason that promise exists is honest.

They know you will barely see anything in the first three weeks, and they want you to use it long enough to know. The first month is the part where most women would give up on any other product, and the guarantee is built around exactly that window.

If you are sceptical, that is the part to remember.

You have two months to find out, and if it is not for you, your money comes back.

A few people have asked me where to get the bar, so here is what I know.

It is a natural soap made for women's skin with age spots, sold through one website only in the UK. No resellers, no version on Amazon, nothing in the chemists. Milde & Co keep the supply tight and the formulation under their own control.

When I went back to order again, the five bar bundle was the obvious choice. One bar runs out around week six, which is the worst time to decide whether to keep going. The bundle lasts six months and comes with a free exfoliating glove.

I will be honest. I put off ordering by a week once, came back to a sold out page, and had to wait nearly a month. A longer fortnight of staring at my hands than I would have liked.

So if you are reading this and thinking maybe, here is the link.

Update (6 jan):

I had a message from Milde & Co last weekend that I felt I should pass on. They told me the bundle has been moving faster than they had planned for, and the last batch produced is now running low. They expect to be sold out within the next ten days, and the next production run is not arriving until July.

If you have been on the fence, that is the situation as I understand it. I do not know exactly how many bundles are left, only that there are fewer than they would like, and the gap until the next batch is longer than usual.

I am not writing this to push anyone. I am writing it because I would have wanted to know, sitting where you are sitting, before I made the choice I had to make again a few weeks ago.

About the author

Margaret Whitfield

Guest author & Fifty Plus Edit reader

Margaret Whitfield is sixty one and lives in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, where she spent twenty five years as a practice assistant before retiring last year. She has two daughters, one granddaughter named Lily, and walks the Dales on Saturdays with her friend Helen.

Comments (3)
Karen

Karen

19 Feb, 2025 at 02:31 pm

I stopped wearing short sleeves two summers ago. Told myself it was just a phase. Six weeks in and I wore a sleeveless top to my daughter's birthday lunch. Nobody said anything but I noticed. That was enough.

Patricia

Patricia

28 Jan, 2025 at 11:42 am

I had been putting foundation on the backs of my hands before leaving the house. My husband never noticed but I did, every single morning. I haven't done it once this week. Small thing. Doesn't feel small.

Margaret M.

Margaret M.

14 Jan, 2025 at 09:14 am

I nearly didn't take the photo at week four because I thought it was my imagination. Showed my sister anyway. She asked what I'd had done. Nothing, I said. Just changed my cleanser. She didn't believe me.