English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories
0

How do you get rid of hickies

2007-01-13 16:31:09 · 24 answers · asked by houstonsweetie07 2 in Family & Relationships Singles & Dating

24 answers

Get yourself a razor blade and cut it out, but be ready to stitch it up ASAP. Oh, and have plenty of rags handy, to soak up the blood.

2007-01-13 16:38:02 · answer #1 · answered by gonad_obrien 2 · 0 0

Steps
Do Immediately

1. Apply an icepack to the hickey. Do this as soon as possible after receiving the hickey. You can wrap some ice in a towel, use a pre-frozen ice pack, or put a spoon in the freezer for a few minutes. Gently hold the cold compress to the skin for several minutes (up to 20 minutes, if it doesn’t feel too uncomfortable), remove the compress for several minutes, and then apply it again.
2. Try the toothbrush or comb method. Many people swear by it, but it’s important to remember that a hickey is a bruise, and most bruises just take time to disappear, so don’t expect a miracle.
* Lightly brush the hickey and the area around it with a stiff-bristled toothbrush or a comb. Doing this breaks up the blood clot and gets circulation going again.
* Wait about 15 minutes. The redness and swelling will spread, but will be less obvious after about 15 minutes.
* Apply a cold compress, as above.
* Repeat if necessary. Depending on the magnitude of your hickey this method may work, or it may just spread the discoloration a bit (it can make it worse if you press too hard.)
3. Conceal the hickey with makeup. The most effective makeup will be the green-tinted concealer, as it is designed to negate red skin tones. Apply a foundation that’s a little lighter than your skin tone. Apply it directly on the hickey and all around it so it doesn’t look obvious that you’re trying to conceal something. You can try an eyeshadow that’s lighter than your skin tone if you don’t have a concealer.
4. Cover the hickey with something. Wear a turtleneck, a collared shirt or blouse, or a scarf (appropriate for the weather of course), around your neck. If you have long hair, style it so that it hangs down over the hickey. Frequently check the positioning of your shirt or your hair to make sure the hickey is still covered.
5. Use a coin. This method is probably the most painful, but has proven VERY effective. First, stretch the skin flat (pulling away from the hickey on two opposite sides works well for this). Then, use the edge of a large coin to scrape the skin. Use the coin as if the red area of the skin was butter on toast that needed to be spread outward. The only difference is that you must press quite HARD (do it as hard as you can, but not so hard that you break the skin or cause bleeding). What this does is push the excess blood, which has escaped from the capillaries, out of the surface skin. There will be redness from the scraping of the coin, but that will go away much faster than the hickey. And in any case, a scrape is much less conspicuous than a hickey.
6. Put a spoon in the freezer for a few minutes. Apply pressure and slide the spoon along the hickey. The pressure and coldness help disperse the blood that has formed. You will need to repeat freezing, if the spoon starts getting warm it does not work. You will also need to use quite a bit of pressure with the spoon but you will see results over a few minutes of doing this.


Long Term Solutions

1. Apply arnica salve. Arnica is an herbal salve that helps reduce swelling and can minimize the appearance of a hickey. (Some people claim Witch Hazel will shorten hickey healing time.)
2. Eat healthy foods. A healthy diet can help any bruise heal more quickly.
* Increase your intake of vitamin P (also called bioflavonoids). Examples of foods that contain significant amounts of bioflavonoids: lemons, green peppers, broccoli, and rose hips. The primary job of bioflavonoids is to protect the capillaries, keep them strong and prevent them from bleeding. The converse of this equals a hickey.
* Use Vitamin K cream (aloe vera and vitamin E don't hurt either). Vitamin K helps reabsorb the blood stuck near the surface of the skin that causes the appearance of a hickey (more specifically the redness or brownness). Also increase your intake of vitamin K by eating green leafy vegetables, such as spinach, green cabbage, kale, Swiss chard, turnip greens, broccoli, tomatoes as well as exceptional meats like liver.
3. Apply heat to a hickey that lasts more than a couple days. Saturate a washcloth in hot water, wring it out, and hold it to your skin for several minutes. Reheat the washcloth with more water as necessary.

2007-01-14 00:34:17 · answer #2 · answered by lordofchaosiori 2 · 0 1

They are the breaking of small blood vessels under the skin and have to heal before they will go away, sometimes ice will help speed the process but not often

2007-01-14 00:35:04 · answer #3 · answered by reshadow31 3 · 0 0

Hold your skin and scrape it with a credit card or ID.Drr! I had my daughter do it so she did not have to go to school and embarras us both when her BF did the vampire thing. Never had one myself but the credit card alwayse gets rid of the mark.

2007-01-14 00:34:23 · answer #4 · answered by JAMI E 5 · 0 0

Oh the horror of the hickey---all over the world for hundreds of years the dreaded hickeys have reared their ugly heads. it is a bruise and time will cause them to dissipate. When will you stop letting Dracula suck on your neck? That's what does it, you know. If you don't want them--don't let someone give them to you---simple????

2007-01-14 00:36:13 · answer #5 · answered by fire_inur_eyes 7 · 0 0

depends on where the hickie is

2007-01-14 00:33:44 · answer #6 · answered by howard o 2 · 0 0

I feel you should show it to the doctor, they are the best to tell you as all have different type of skin... so what works for one, doesnt work for the other... for timming make up will help you to hide...

2007-01-14 00:37:36 · answer #7 · answered by Richa 6 · 0 0

use make up or get a spoon put it in the freezer wait til it gets cold and put it on there .. it worked 4 me hope it does the same for you

2007-01-14 00:34:47 · answer #8 · answered by Princez 1 · 0 0

Try putting a spoon in the freezer and holding it on there. I've heard it works, I've also heard it doesn't. Try Googling it!

2007-01-14 00:34:30 · answer #9 · answered by imaliberal 1 · 0 0

Freezing a spoon and apply to the area.

2007-01-14 00:33:29 · answer #10 · answered by Learning 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers