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Greetings Everyone,

I joined recently and I want to start making skin care poducts at home-

partially because of health problems. Right now I'm a bit embarassed to say I'm

a biologist by profession, but making a handcream seems beyond me : ) I have

tons of questions. I had no idea there were so many different kinds of

florasols, tinctures, oils, butters, waxes, clays, etc on the market. If anyone

would like to help guide a green amatuer through the process and offer some of

your experience I'd be very grateful. I don't like to waste a lot good organic

ingredients, so if anyone can tell me by just looking at a recipe either yeah

that's a good idea or no that won't work, it would be very helpful to me.

Thanks, and have a beautiful day,

Rose

 

 

 

 

 

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Hi Rose,

 

I'd be happy to help out. What do you have to work with? What are you

wanting to make? All natural?

 

I have been making lotions/creams for quite a while now and continue to

formulate and play around with different emulsifiers etc. so might be able

to give you some tips.

 

Margaret

Natural Indulgences LLC

 

 

> " RedWineRedRoses " <redwineredroses

>

>

> formulating lotions

>Sun, 28 Jul 2002 05:14:50 -0700

>

>Greetings Everyone,

>I joined recently and I want to start making skin care poducts at home-

>partially because of health problems. Right now I'm a bit embarassed to say

>I'm a biologist by profession, but making a handcream seems beyond me : ) I

>have tons of questions. I had no idea there were so many different kinds of

>florasols, tinctures, oils, butters, waxes, clays, etc on the market. If

>anyone would like to help guide a green amatuer through the process and

>offer some of your experience I'd be very grateful. I don't like to waste a

>lot good organic ingredients, so if anyone can tell me by just looking at a

>recipe either yeah that's a good idea or no that won't work, it would be

>very helpful to me. Thanks, and have a beautiful day,

>Rose

>

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Rose, Just post to the list any recipe that you come up with and anyone here

with the experience will gladly share their knowledge with you. Plus there are

a lot of websites that might help you out:

http://www.snowdriftfarms.comhttp://www.auntroma.com/new_page_5.htmhttp://www.lu\

xurylane.com/thelibrary/index.htm These have some recipes and basic

instructions.....you probably have most of the info already :-) Cheryl--- On Sun

07/28, RedWineRedRoses & lt; redwineredroses & gt; wrote:

RedWineRedRoses [ redwineredroses]To:

: Sun, 28 Jul 2002 05:14:50 -0700Subject:

formulating lotionsGreetings Everyone,I joined recently and I

want to start making skin care poducts at home- partially because of health

problems. Right now I'm a bit embarassed to say I'm a biologist by profession,

but making a handcream seems beyond me : ) I have tons of questions. I had no

idea there were so many different kinds of florasols, tinctures, oils, butters,

waxes, clays, etc on the market. If anyone would like to help guide a green

amatuer through the process and offer some of your experience I'd be very

grateful. I don't like to waste a lot good organic ingredients, so if anyone can

tell me by just looking at a recipe either yeah that's a good idea or no that

won't work, it would be very helpful to me. Thanks, and have a beautiful

day,Rose

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Guest guest

Hi Margaret, and Thank You!

My dogs won't be suffering from an EFA deficiency any time soon, since they've

enjoyed my last 3 batches of lotion (don't worry, all edible ingredients, LOL).

I've been using plain granular lecithin as the only emulsifier but that hasn't

worked, and I'm not sure why because it works so well in cooking. I asked a

colleague who teaches chemistry. He said I had too much " thyme " on my " hands " . I

told him I hoped he was a better teacher than comedian...

I'm getting some beeswax right now. Also have two questions: Is shea butter hard

to work with? I've read that it becomes grainy if not melted properly. The other

question, is there any reason why you can't use pure almond extract as part of

the water included? I see a lot of recipes use almond oil but I'm trying to

avoid the high n-6 oils for this project.

Thanks again,

Rose

 

 

-

Margaret Helm-Duell

Sunday, July 28, 2002 2:18 PM

Re: formulating lotions

 

 

Hi Rose,

 

I'd be happy to help out. What do you have to work with? What are you

wanting to make? All natural?

 

I have been making lotions/creams for quite a while now and continue to

formulate and play around with different emulsifiers etc. so might be able

to give you some tips.

 

Margaret

Natural Indulgences LLC

 

 

> " RedWineRedRoses " <redwineredroses

>

>

> formulating lotions

>Sun, 28 Jul 2002 05:14:50 -0700

>

>Greetings Everyone,

>I joined recently and I want to start making skin care poducts at home-

>partially because of health problems. Right now I'm a bit embarassed to say

>I'm a biologist by profession, but making a handcream seems beyond me : ) I

>have tons of questions. I had no idea there were so many different kinds of

>florasols, tinctures, oils, butters, waxes, clays, etc on the market. If

>anyone would like to help guide a green amatuer through the process and

>offer some of your experience I'd be very grateful. I don't like to waste a

>lot good organic ingredients, so if anyone can tell me by just looking at a

>recipe either yeah that's a good idea or no that won't work, it would be

>very helpful to me. Thanks, and have a beautiful day,

>Rose

>

>

>

>

>

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Hi Rose,

 

I have recently used liquid lecithin as my emulsifier and it worked very

well for a thin lotion. I have also been working with glyceryl monostearate

(glycerin & stearic acid) to form natural emulsions. Beeswax I have found

makes a very heavy cream or lotion, and I use that with borax (you need to)

to make my peppermint foot butter. Very rich and creamy. I tend to like a

lighter blend for my face though. (not that you asked :)

 

Shea butter in higher concentrations can become grainy but, I use it in

almost everything I make. You can heat it at like 180 for 30 minutes and it

should " pop " the fat granules that is the " grain " . If you keep the % down,

it shouldn't be a problem at all. And different suppliers, grades,

refinements etc... will all play a role in that.

 

Are you trying for an almond scent? Sweet almond oil in formulations

doesn't give any odor. However, if you used the extract it would. I have

made a vanilla cream using extract as part of the water portion so using an

extract can work. I would make sure it is without sugar though.

 

Pretty much anytime you see a recipe calling for an oil, you can sub in

whatever oil you'd like to use. Liquid for liquid and solid for a solid

type deal.

 

Happy Crafting!

Margaret

 

 

 

 

> " RedWineRedRoses " <redwineredroses

>

>

>Re: formulating lotions

>Wed, 31 Jul 2002 02:21:53 -0700

>

>Hi Margaret, and Thank You!

>My dogs won't be suffering from an EFA deficiency any time soon, since

>they've enjoyed my last 3 batches of lotion (don't worry, all edible

>ingredients, LOL). I've been using plain granular lecithin as the only

>emulsifier but that hasn't worked, and I'm not sure why because it works so

>well in cooking. I asked a colleague who teaches chemistry. He said I had

>too much " thyme " on my " hands " . I told him I hoped he was a better teacher

>than comedian...

>I'm getting some beeswax right now. Also have two questions: Is shea butter

>hard to work with? I've read that it becomes grainy if not melted properly.

>The other question, is there any reason why you can't use pure almond

>extract as part of the water included? I see a lot of recipes use almond

>oil but I'm trying to avoid the high n-6 oils for this project.

>Thanks again,

>Rose

 

 

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Cheryl,

Hi! I appreciate you sending those links. I read through each site and Wow

that's a lot of practical information. I thought there ought to be something in

between " mix together beeswax with lanolin " and the 6,000 page chemical index of

cosmetics manufacturing...

I found this recipe on Care2 http://www.care2.com/channels/solutions/guides/212

and I chose these ingredients:

3 tbl. jojoba oil

1 tbl. shea butter

1 tbl. castor oil

3 tbl. coconut oil

3 tbl. distilled water

1 tbl. witch hazel

4 tbl. rosewater

2 teas. alpha lipoic acid

1 teas. grapefruit seed glycerite

1,500 mg. PABA

 

So do you think that would come together ok? I want something very rich that has

" staying power " along with some microbicidal activity. There are lots more herbs

and nutrients I'd like to add but need to get a base perfected first. Should I

add any glycerin or lecithin? Would kokum butter be a better choice with these

oils than shea butter? Let me know what you think. I'm trying to use mostly

certified organic and edible ingredients, but it's a little difficult because

I'm chemically sensitive to some of the most common ingredients in natural

formulas like aloe and lavender.

Have A Beautiful Day!

Rose

 

-

Cheryl

Sunday, July 28, 2002 2:38 PM

RE: formulating lotions

 

 

Rose, Just post to the list any recipe that you come up with and anyone here

with the experience will gladly share their knowledge with you. Plus there are

a lot of websites that might help you out:

http://www.snowdriftfarms.comhttp://www.auntroma.com/new_page_5.htmhttp://www.lu\

xurylane.com/thelibrary/index.htm These have some recipes and basic

instructions.....you probably have most of the info already :-) Cheryl---

 

 

 

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Margaret,

Hi! I was curious about almond extract because it's available cert org, its

very shelf stable (doesn't grow germs) crystal clear and smells so nice. But

I've never seen it included in a formula so I thought there might be a

reason I didn't know about (except maybe the price, lol).

What do you put in your foot butter???

Rose

 

 

-

" Margaret Helm-Duell " <naturalindulgences

 

Wednesday, July 31, 2002 3:35 PM

Re: formulating lotions

 

 

> Hi Rose,

>

> I have recently used liquid lecithin as my emulsifier and it worked very

> well for a thin lotion. I have also been working with glyceryl

monostearate

> (glycerin & stearic acid) to form natural emulsions. Beeswax I have found

> makes a very heavy cream or lotion, and I use that with borax (you need

to)

> to make my peppermint foot butter. Very rich and creamy. I tend to like

a

> lighter blend for my face though. (not that you asked :)

>

> Shea butter in higher concentrations can become grainy but, I use it in

> almost everything I make. You can heat it at like 180 for 30 minutes and

it

> should " pop " the fat granules that is the " grain " . If you keep the %

down,

> it shouldn't be a problem at all. And different suppliers, grades,

> refinements etc... will all play a role in that.

>

> Are you trying for an almond scent? Sweet almond oil in formulations

> doesn't give any odor. However, if you used the extract it would. I have

> made a vanilla cream using extract as part of the water portion so using

an

> extract can work. I would make sure it is without sugar though.

>

> Pretty much anytime you see a recipe calling for an oil, you can sub in

> whatever oil you'd like to use. Liquid for liquid and solid for a solid

> type deal.

>

> Happy Crafting!

> Margaret

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