While sugaring isn’t a pleasant experience, it easily isn’t quite as painful as waxing
I’ve tried waxing for hair removal, and it’s just too difficult for me, but I also ended up with legitimately nasty brown patches because it irritated my sensitive skin so badly, but for years, I stuck with shaving and dealt with constant stubble; When someone recommended that I try sugaring, I thought they were talking about some type of baking recipe. Upon further talking, I learned that it’s easily a system of hair removal. I was a little reluctant because sugaring is similar to waxing in that it pulls the hair from the root, but the paste is made of lemon, water and sugar, and the ingredients are heated until they form a candy-like consistency, plus it’s applied to the skin after cooling. The mixture is really natural plus way more environmentally-friendly than wax. The main difference is the direction from which the hair is pulled. With waxing, the mixture is applied in the same direction as hair growth and detached in the reverse direction. The sugar paste is set against the direction of hair growth plus detached in the same direction as growth. It is detached with little, fast yanks. Waxing tends to break hair follicles in portions! Plus, the sugaring paste won’t stick to the skin, so it only removes the hair, avoiding that inflamed skin. Because of this, it can be used for air removal from the legs, arms, underarms, pubic area, face and somewhere. While sugaring isn’t a pleasant experience, it easily isn’t quite as painful as waxing. It provides super smooth skin plus there’s no bumps left behind.