Sunday 18 January 2009

Care for Toes

I easily develop calluses on my toes. It has something to do with my feet size - too slim but long, so I end up buying show not really the right size. Plus, I have a very dry skin on my feet. Been doing a lot of research how to give my feet some TLC. I use foot cover and put foot lotion (only if I remember it). Lol.

Anyway, I also found this helpful tips from ehow.com:

Opt for low-heeled shoes; high heels tilt the foot and put most of your weight on the balls of your feet, creating large calluses. Wear thick socks with extra cushioning in the heel, ball and toe area.

File away any developing calluses with an emery board or pumice stone following a bath or shower, when the water has soften your callus.

Use a softening agent like Ultramide 25 lotion to peel away thick calluses.

Apply lotions and moisturizers generously. Use lanolin, Vaseline or vitamin E oils on feet, hands, elbows, knees or anywhere a callus is likely to develop.

Choose shoes shaped like human feet. Narrow-toed shoes make feet more prone to calluses because the foot is held at a funny angle inside the shoe.

Buy high-quality exercise shoes with plenty of padding and room in the toe area. Don't try to save money by buying cheap shoes. Your feet will suffer.

Step8Have hammertoes, bunions and bone spurs surgically repaired if they're causing chronic callus formation.

Wear knee pads if you spend a lot of time on your knees gardening, scrubbing or waxing the floor. Knee pads will prevent callus formation.

Don gloves to prevent calluses from forming on your hands when doing heavy work such as moving branches, raking bags full of leaves and hoeing.


Oh, have to add foot lotion in my shopping list (no discount furniture for now).

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