Comment by OptionOfT
19 hours ago
Your clothes still need to have a certain SPF, and you're not gonna wear gloves when 100 outside are you?
19 hours ago
Your clothes still need to have a certain SPF, and you're not gonna wear gloves when 100 outside are you?
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.
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.
Who puts sunscreen on their hands? People in the sun who want to avoid wrinkles and burns and skin cancer on their hands.
If it's exposed skin, it gets sunscreen.
Nearly everyone I know puts sunscreen on their hands. Here in Australia, the world melanoma capital, sun safety is drilled into you as a kid, to the extent that "no hat no play" used to be official policy in most schools.
Pretty much this
Also for the other comments there are gloves and face masks but I think most people do fine without them unless you're working outside
For the nerds here working indoors during the hottest times of the day... they may need more sun than they get really, rather than blocking it with toxic sunscreens (depends on where they live?)
I put sunscreen on my hands.
People who don't enjoy sunburns on their hands put sunscreen on their hands.
While generally true, it's worth remembering that thin shirts can have an SPF as low as 50 or so, which isn't much.
SPF is logarithmic so high numbers can be misleading. The FDA has recently banned labeling above SPF 60 for this reason. Doctors usually recommend 30
It means only 2% of the harmful rays (UVA) are getting through the shirt or alternatively the skin under the shirt can spend 50 times as long in the sun as it could without any protection.
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A typical tshirt is closer to SPF 7, depending on color and weight.
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