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If you have spent too much time in the sun and you have burned and begun to peel, you don't have to spend a fortune on sunburn remedies. Some of the best remedies for sunburn are probably already in your kitchen.

One of the easiest home remedies for sunburn can backfire if you don't do it the right way.

5. Take a bath.

A cool bath in alkaline water can stop the inflammatory process caused by sunburn and relieve pain and itch--provided you don't stay in the water too long. Staying in the bath long enough for your skin to start to shrivel up like a prune will actually slow down healing from sunburn, and using soaps or bubble bath can injure sunburned skin so that you have to deal with dry, flaky, itchy skin later. Alkalize your bath water with two tablespoons (about 30 grams) of baking soda, thoroughly mixed in the bath water before you go in.

6. Treat your skin with oatmeal.

Oatmeal mixed with water (not hot, cooked oatmeal!) is a great treatment for sunburned skin, although it's for after-care, not immediate care of sunburn. When the pain and redness have started to subside, place a thin layer of damp oatmeal on burned skin and allow to dry. The oatmeal's fibers form a protective barrier on the skin, and the sensation of the slightly scratchy oatmeal overrides lingering sensation of itch and burn. Rinse off in cool or water water in the shower after the oatmeal pack has been on the skin for an hour or two.

7. Prevent chafing with cornstarch.

Elastic bans in undergarments can cause pain and inflammation when worn over sunburned skin, but sometimes you just have to wear them. To reduce the problems caused by friction on your skin, pat down with cornstarch after the skin is dry. Don't use talcum powder, which has been associated with increased risk of ovarian cancer in women.

8. Try a potato pat down.

Chopped or ground raw Irish potato is a well-known home remedy for skin pain. You don't use the peel. Just mince some raw potato, or make a raw potato puree in your food processor, and apply to sunburned skin for 20 to 30 minutes. Chemicals in the potato interact with white blood cells to reduce the intensity of the inflammation they generate to kill harmless bacteria on the skin.

9. Wear your tea instead of drinking it.

Black, white, and green tea are useful for controlling flaking and itch. Their natural tannins "tan" the skin in a healthy way, crosslinking proteins so that skin doesn't flake in tiny bits all the time. Just apply a warm (not hot) damp tea bag to affected skin until you feel relief.

10. Moisturize!

Chances are you already have some kind of moisturizer around the house. Applying moisturizer to sunburned skin accelerates the healing process, provided the product is made with water or even oil, but not alcohol. Alcohol-based "moisturizers," essentially anything that leaves your skin feeling cool and tingly, actually make sunburn worse.

  • Algra RJ, Knox JM. Topical photoprotective agents. Int J Dermatol. 1978 Oct. 17(8):628-34.
  • Kenny OM, McCarthy CM, Brunton NP, Hossain MB, Rai DK, Collins SG, Jones PW, Maguire AR, O'Brien NM. Anti-inflammatory properties of potato glycoalkaloids in stimulated Jurkat and Raw 264.7 mouse macrophages. Life Sci. 2013 Apr 19. 92(13):775-82. doi: 10.1016/j.lfs.2013.02.006. Epub 2013 Feb 20.
  • Photo courtesy of Daniel by Flickr : www.flickr.com/photos/ydhsu/3748384676/
  • Photo courtesy of Carrie! by Flickr : www.flickr.com/photos/lacarita/1388882107/