website page counter I’ve found the best £4.50 buy for your feet in Boots – but I also put it on my face as it works wonders for vile pimples – Pixie Games

I’ve found the best £4.50 buy for your feet in Boots – but I also put it on my face as it works wonders for vile pimples


A WACKY beauty buff has claimed a FOOT cream works wonders for spots. 

The shopper, who chose to remain anonymous, swears by Boots’ £4.50 Deep Moisturising Foot Cream for zapping pimples before they turn “vile”. 

a woman with red nails is applying cream to her face
Getty

A wacky beauty buff has revealed the FOOT cream she puts on her face[/caption]

a jar of boots deep moisturising foot cream with mint lavender and marshmallow
Boots

It’ll set you back just £4.50 for a tub in Boots[/caption]

And she says the reason it works so well is because the lotion for your trotters is “medicated and antiseptic”.

She claims that it clears up acne and “horrible spots” overnight with just a small dab. 

“I first bought this cream a little over three years ago and it is now part of my regular routine to keep my feet looking and feeling soft,” she explained.

“It smells lovely and you can noticeably see results within days. 

“Whenever I leave my feet un-pampered for a bit and begin to notice how dry they’ve become, I smother my feet in this cream, pop my socks on and can tell the difference in just a few hours.”

But it doesn’t stop there. 

“I occasionally get the odd – but most horrible – spot on my face,” she continued. 

“I’m talking about three whiteheads on just one huge red inflamed spot. 

“Nine times out of ten, these spots become infected. 

“As this is an antiseptic cream, I once dabbled a bit on a spot on my face that I knew would become vile. 


“To my amazement, the spot dried out and was just a red dry blotch the next morning.

“I absolutely love this cream and couldn’t recommend it enough.”

The Boots Deep Moisturising Foot Cream contains natural herbal extracts and is dermatologically tested.

The lotion has a whopping 316 five star reviews on the Boots website. 

Though, not everyone is dabbing it on their spots. 

Dermatologists recommend only using products designed for the face on yours, as the skin on the face is more delicate than elsewhere on the body.

Where has Boots closed stores?

BOOTS has never given a full list of the 300 stores closing.

Here’s what we know so far about some of the locations where branches that have gone for good.

  • Pool, Cornwall
  • Cambrone, Cornwall
  • Redruth, Cornwall
  • Wood Street, Swindon, Wiltshire
  • Clifton, Yorkshire
  • Cliftonville, Kent
  • Pemberton, Wigan
  • Littlehampton, West Sussex
  • Hough Lane, Layland, Lancashire
  • Front Street, Prudhoe
  • Rhos on Sea, Wales
  • Colwyn Bay, Wales
  • Portland Walk, Barrow
  • Gestridge Road, Teignbridge
  • Caerleon Road, Newport
  • Chepstow Road, Newport
  • Carlyon Road, St Austell, Cornwall
  • St Blazey, Cornwall
  • Lurgan
  • Chard Road, Plymouth
  • Mannamead Road, Plymouth
  • Claremont Street, Plymouth
  • Heathside Road, Woking
  • UEA campus
  • Hamlet Court Road, Westcliff
  • Holywell, Flintshire (Wales)
  • Windhill Road, Wakefield
  • Upper Warrengate, Wakefield
  • Glastonbury
  • Uppingham Road, Leicester
  • Guildford Road, Woking
  • Kings Square, York
  • Warminster
  • Gorleston, Great Yarmouth
  • High Row, Darlington
  • Mudge Way, Plymouth
  • Mount Pleasant, Exeter
  • Kirkby Ashfield

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