The kids are clearly burned. They are both very fair haired & Irish.
It’s very evident in the stories.
No tan is safe. None.
Skin Cancer is the most prevalent cancer in Ireland. A tan is never worth it. Sun cream needs to be applied properly and frequently.
Sorry this is ridiculous. My children are white, and have light hair. I’m Irish, their dad isn’t and their skin starts to tan from around April onwards as soon as there’s any bit of sun and gets very dark by the end of summer, even with factor 50 on every day. They’ve never had a sunburn. I’m very careful with their skin, spf, hats, long swimsuits etc but I’d have to keep them indoors all year long and ban their teachers from leaving them out in the yard at school for their skin to stay white
![Face with rolling eyes :rolling_eyes: 🙄](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/joypixels/emoji-assets@5.0/png/64/1f644.png)
![Face with rolling eyes :rolling_eyes: 🙄](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/joypixels/emoji-assets@5.0/png/64/1f644.png)
![Face with rolling eyes :rolling_eyes: 🙄](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/joypixels/emoji-assets@5.0/png/64/1f644.png)
I do agree with you that Erin rose has looked burned in the past, about a month back her arms looked very red and me julie had a filter on to cover it up
![Face with rolling eyes :rolling_eyes: 🙄](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/joypixels/emoji-assets@5.0/png/64/1f644.png)
I get that these things can happen but I do think with Julie there’s an element of liking that her kids have a ‘colour,’ aswell
![Face with rolling eyes :rolling_eyes: 🙄](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/joypixels/emoji-assets@5.0/png/64/1f644.png)