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Tan line
Visible differences in skin color due to tanning
Visible differences in skin color due to tanning
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A tan line is a visually clear division on the human skin between an area of pronounced comparative paleness relative to other areas that have been suntanned by exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation or by sunless tanning. The source of the radiation may be the sun or artificial UV sources such as tanning lamps. Tan lines are usually an unintentional result of a work environment or recreational activities, but are sometimes intentional. Many people seek to avoid tan lines that will be visible when regular clothes are worn.
Intentional tan lines

One of the common uses for tanning beds is the option of tanning entirely nude to reduce the appearance of tan lines. In contrast, some people prefer to have tan lines and will wear undergarments or swimwear with the deliberate purpose of creating a sharply defined tan line.
Additionally, "tanning stickers" that attach to the skin while tanning can be purchased. Common designs are a heart, Playboy bunny, and dolphins, but many designs exist. These are typically sold on a roll of 500 to 1000 as single-use, disposable stickers. People can place the sticker on the same area each time they tan (indoors or outdoors), leaving the covered area pale while the rest of their skin tans normally. This allows individuals to see their tanning progress and others to see if the "tan tattoo" is in an exposed area.
It is also possible to use sunscreen to create intentional tan lines that form patterns or words, to make a statement, or to create a design.
Avoiding tan lines
Wearing clothes while tanning results in the creation of tan lines, which many people regard as un-aesthetic. Many people want to avoid tan lines on those body parts that will be visible when they are fully clothed. Some people try to achieve an all-over tan or to maximize their tan coverage. To achieve an all-over tan, tanners need to dispense with clothing and to maximize coverage; they need to minimize the amount of clothing they wear while tanning. For women who cannot dispense with a swimsuit, they sometimes tan with the back strap undone while lying on the front or remove shoulder straps, besides wearing swimsuits covering less area than their normal clothing. Any exposure is subject to local community standards and personal choice. Some people tan in the privacy of their backyard where they can at times tan without clothes, and some countries have set aside clothing-optional swimming areas (popularly known as nude beaches), where people can tan and swim clothes-free. The naturist movement provides completely nude, clothes free sunbathing opportunities in most countries. Some people tan topless, and others wear very brief swimwear, such as a microkini or thong.
A 1969 innovation is tan-through swimwear, which uses fabric perforated with thousands of micro holes that are nearly invisible to the naked eye, but which transmit enough sunlight to approach an all-over tan, especially if the fabric is stretched taut. Tan-through swimwear typically allows more than one-third of UV rays to pass through (equivalent to SPF 3 or less), and an application of sunscreen even to the covered area is recommended but not for all types of tan through fabric. There is fabric that exists that requires no sunscreen underneath as it has built in SPF.
References
References
- "Definitions for farmers tan".
- (22 May 2018). "The Farmers' Guide to the Farmer's Tan".
- Taylor, Angela. (October 17, 1969). "Tan-Through Fabric Lets Sun Shine In". [[The New York Times]].
- Krichko, Kade. (November 8, 2013). "Goggle Tans Are All The Rage".
- "How to Get a Tan Tattoo". wikiHow.
- (September 1, 1969). "Scorecard: No nudes is good news".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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