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GET A GREAT TAN IN OUR TANNING STUDIO AND BE ADMIRED BY
OTHERS
With a nice and healthy looking tan, you look better, feel
better and are admired by others. So why not come in to one of our clubs and
get a great tan. Our professional staff will look after you and ensure that you
get the right and safe exposure of UV light. The environment makes you feel
welcome and our friendly staff will make you feel comfortable and relaxed.
After your treatment you will look and feel great.
Something about your tan...
Tanning takes place in the skin's outermost layer, the epidermis. About five
percent of the cells in your epidermis are special cells call melanocytes. When
exposed to ultraviolet B light (short wave ultraviolet), melanocytes produce
melanin - the pigment which is ultimately responsible for your tan. The pinkish
melanin travels up through the epidermis and is absorbed by other skin cells.
When exposed to ultraviolet A light (longer wave), the melanin oxidizes or
darkens. This darkening is your skin's way of protecting itself against too
much UV light. Everyone has the same number of melanocytes in their body -
about five million. But your heredity dictates how much melanin your body's
melanocytes naturally will produce. For example, the skin of African Americans
contains enough melanin to create a black or brown skin color, while the skin
of Caucasians has less melanin and is pale. In order to most effectively avoid
overexposure, a tan should be acquired gradually, according to the guidelines
prescribed by your salon professional. A sunburn, or eruthema, occurs when too
much ultraviolet light reaches the skin and disrupts the tiny blood vessels
near the skin's surface. Why does a tan fade? Cells in the epidermis'
germinative layer (also called the living epidermis) are constantly reproducing
and pushing older cells upward toward the horny layer (dead epidermis), where
they are sloughed off in about one month. As your skin replaces its cells, the
cells laden with melanin are removed. So the tanning process must continue with
the new cells.
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