☀️ Shield Your Skin, Conquer the Sun!
Thinksport SPF 30 Face & Body Mineral Sunscreen Stick is a safe, natural, and water-resistant sun cream designed for athletes and active individuals. This vegan and reef-friendly sunscreen offers broad-spectrum UVA/UVB protection, is easy to apply, and provides up to 80 minutes of water resistance, making it perfect for sports and outdoor activities.
K**A
Nice sunscreen!
I was looking for some sunscreen that would be small and not take up too much room in my bag. This sunscreen is perfect. It is not too heavy or greasy. It goes on easily, spreads nicely and worked great.
R**L
Use to save the reef!
Works well and better for the environment.
R**.
Good ingredients, but typical for mineral SPF
I was hoping this would be smooth or thin enough to use under makeup, but it really doesn't sit well; it's patchy and clings to dry spots, but isn't greasy. It works well as a body sunscreen and is relatively easy to apply. Considering it's mineral SPF, there's only a little bit of white-cast, but doesn't really matter if it's on the body. It's small enough to throw into a purse and good for travel.
A**A
Super protective
Great for the beach. But like every zinc based product leaves white cast. But good for surfing.
G**S
Easy to pack, easy to apply
This sunscreen stick is excellent. It goes on almost perfectly clearly and requires little "rubbing in." Given its size, it's only suitable for smaller areas (face, neck, maybe chest). But they have many promises of "clear" mineral sunscreen sticks; this is my favorite. I like that the ingredient list is clean and EWG-certified.
M**K
Great for kids
My 3 year old can use the stick herself and we use a makeup brush to rub it in. Great coverage and she thinks it's good fun. I love the clean rating on EWG scale
M**K
Convenient
The size and application is great, especially with wiggly kids. It works well, not slimy or pore clogging. Lasts quite a few hours without reapplication. I will be buying again.
A**A
Mineral sunscreen stick review
I’m writing a review for this product as well as a number of other mineral sunscreen sticks (MSS) after testing a bunch of them—scroll down to point #6 below if you want to know which one I thought was the best. I’ve placed this exact review on every single other MSS I used. I specifically elected to go with mineral-based sunscreens—lots of talk on the environmental effects of the other sunscreens (not sure how much of this is actually true, but I’m willing to avoid the non-mineral sunscreens given the minimal investment on my part). Here are a few important points about this review:1. No one paid me to write this review. I put down my own $140 to get all 13 of these MSSs. I just wanted to find the best one by limiting as much bias as possible. Yes, my wife definitely gave me the you’re-crazy-but-I-guess-I’m-stuck-now look.2. Quick sunscreen tutorial. Most dermatologists say we should try to get an SPF of 30+. Each 1% of zinc counts for 1.6 SPF, so to hit SPF 30, your zinc has to be 18.75%+. Each 1% of titanium counts for 2.6 SPF, so a combination of zinc and titanium could get you to SPF 30 as well. Titanium apparently isn’t good enough to block UV-A (cancer causing and photo-aging) light on its own, so you must add zinc to it. I calculated the SPF based on the stated zinc and titanium percentages on the label and these calculations were usually different from the quoted SPFs (they might be adding more SPFs from other ingredients, but I can’t say for sure). Nine of the 13 MSSs had calculated SPFs 30+. Only 4 of the 13 had a calculated SPF greater than or equal to the label SPF.3. Because I can’t judge cancer prevention or aging blockade in the short term, avoiding burns and eye irritation are the most important immediately observable elements of an MSS. Every MSS I tested did equally well in burn avoidance and eye irritation avoidance.4. It should be noted that I’m not Caucasian, I’m South Asian. If you don’t know what that is exactly, Wikipedia it or watch some Russell Peters standup comedy (his old stuff, not his new stuff). My skin color is probably similar to that of Benjamin Bratt (mind you, we’re talking about his skin color only… I’m not even in the same galaxy of overall looks as he is, much to my wife’s chagrin). The ability of a white-colored MSS to blend is crucial for me. And yes, even brown people like me need sunscreen. It would absolutely suck for me as a South Asian to have a higher risk of heart disease, diabetes, and hypertension, skillfully dodge those bullets with diet and exercise and luck, only to get taken out by skin cancer.5. I like most scents. It seems like so many things are going unscented now—an MSS that is truly unscented is okay, but a lot of things labeled “unscented,” actually have an odd, unpleasant (sort of like bad oatmeal) smell to them. The scent score is logged as a “3” if it’s truly unscented, a “5” if it has a great scent, and a “1” if it smells bad.6. Here’s the final conclusion. Only 3 of the 13 MSSs I tested had the following combination of characteristics: calculated SPF 30+, smell score 3+, and blend score 4+. These top three were: Neutrogena Sheer Zinc, Aveeno Positively Mineral, and Blue Lizard. When you factor in cost, it’s a no-brainer—Neutrogena and Aveeno were only half the cost of Blue Lizard. Therefore, my two winners (tied for first place) are Neutrogena Sheer Zinc and Aveeno Positively Mineral. Honorable mention for Blue Lizard—twice as expensive as the others, but might be slightly easier to maneuver on your face given the smaller size stick (this is a stretch compliment for Blue Lizard—I think NSZ and APM are just better).Hope this helps you select your next mineral sunscreen stick!A^2
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