Winterizing your closet is a process. Often, it involves a donation trash bag, a back-and-forth with the dry cleaners, and trying to find sp...

Just In Time For Fall, Your Cool-Weather Skin-Care Capsule

Winterizing your closet is a process. Often, it involves a donation trash bag, a back-and-forth with the dry cleaners, and trying to find space for all the coats you pulled out of storage. But, what's more fun, and definitely an easier place to start, is giving your skin-care routine a mini refresh.

If you already have a routine that works for you and products you love, great, stick with that. But, to get ahead of most common colder-weather skin concerns — shriveled-up lips and breakouts brought about by a combination of red wine, stress, and dehydration — you can make a few, careful tweaks to what you're doing now, to ensure that you're entering cuffing season, holidays, and potential back-to-office plans without having to worry about your skin. On the contrary, you'll have that good-skin glow, which, even if other parts of your life aren't going to plan, is always a win.

Ahead, five easy tips to transition your skin-care routine into fall and winter.

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Invest In A Bedside-Table Humidifier


If you do nothing else, get a damn humidifier. They come cute and tiny now. Plus, most dermatologists practicing in states that experience four seasons agree that the dry heat warming your house or apartment is not great for you skin. "In those heated, low-humidity environments, we lose more moisture from our skin into the air," explains New York-based dermatologist Dr. Hadley King. "A humidifier in the bedroom at night, or in other rooms where you are spending a lot of time, can keep you from getting a scratchy throat or feeling puffy because your skin's dehydrated."

Hey Dewy Portable Facial Humidifier, $, available at Revolve

Try A Ceramide Moisturizer


The next time you run out of moisturizer, which tends to happen at a breakneck pace in the fall and winter, make sure your next one contains ceramides, fatty acids that help your skin retain moisture. "Adding in a moisturizer that has ceramides in it is something I highly recommend, across the board," explains NYC-based aesthetician Joanna Vargas. "Ceramides heal, super-hydrate, repair the skin barrier, and that's really important as you're moving into the colder months when the skin barrier gets compromised, which is especially likely if you don't get enough sleep or you're stressed."

Joanna Vargas Eden Hydrating Pro Moisturizer, $, available at Joanna Vargas

Layer In An Oil


If you have dry skin, like your concealer sometimes gets flakey, consider layering a few drops of face oil into your morning skin care routine. "Oils help hold hydration in the skin," explains Vargas. "If you're using a hyaluronic-acid serum, use that first, and then put a face oil over, and then your light ceramide cream on top. If you're acne-prone, I would also recommend using retinol at night to go along with that morning routine."

Summer Fridays Heavenly Sixteen All-In-One Face Oil, $, available at Sephora

Exfoliate Less, But Mask More


Don't stop exfoliating in the fall — cell turnover is important — but you might be able to cut back a little. If you're currently exfoliating with a gentle scrub or peel three times a week, maybe pull it back to once or twice, Vargas recommends. "I would also incorporate a soothing mask into your routine, like something that has stem cells or peptides," she says. "You could do a mask twice a week and just exfoliate once."

Fresh Rose Face Mask, $, available at Sephora

Treat Your Lips


Possibly the most relatable skin concern that will plague all of us over the next six months is what Vargas calls "shriveled lips." Sure, you could get a new tube of Chapstick. But Dr. King and Vargas both love the Sara Happ lip balm. "I like that it's a little greasy," Vargas says. "When we see clients in the spa, we always end every facial with a good layer of this lip balm."

Sara Happ The Lip Slip® Balm, $, available at Amazon

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