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http://www.philly.com/inquirer/magazine/20081224_Being_vegan__inside_and_out.htm\

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Being vegan, inside and out

By Dawn Fallik

 

For The Inquirer

 

A vegan for the last eight years, Jennifer Storey is careful not to put meat,

eggs, honey or milk in her body. Now it's becoming easier not to put them on her

body, either.

 

From conditioner to lip balm to plant-based pedicures, companies and spas

nationwide are offering vegan products and services. That typically means

there's no testing on animals, and ingredients are free of animal byproducts -

including beeswax and carmine, a commonly used red coloring made from beetles.

But these goodies aren't tucked away on a dusty bottom shelf in a health-food

store. They're at the hair salon, on the shelves of Lush, or even at the local

Rite Aid.

 

" In the past five or six years, there's really been a shift, " said Storey, a

private fund-raising consultant who first went vegetarian 19 years ago. A week

before Storey was to give birth, she was able to get a pedicure - a plant-based

one, that is - at JuJu, an organic salon in Center City.

 

" I think it says something that I'm so close to my due date and I feel safe

using these products, " she said.

 

Beauty experts, from stylists to reviewers, say that as consumers learn more

about the food they eat, they're also starting to scrutinize other products they

use. Michelle Breyer, cofounder of NaturallyCurly.com, a Web site that reviews

and recommends products for curly hair, said the site is getting more questions

from concerned users.

 

" Customers started asking more questions about product ingredients about three

years ago, but it has accelerated, " Breyer said. " There are a lot more people

calling and asking if something is vegetable-based or animal-based. "

 

JuJu salon owner and vegetarian Julie Ebner is overwhelmed by the choices - even

ones that fit her very picky standards at the organic salon, including

plant-based hair dyes, nail polish and cosmetics.

 

" I can find many products out there that fit what I need as a consumer and that

are very effective as a hairstylist, " she said.

 

While there are more options, there's also more confusion. The Food and Drug

Administration does not require beauty companies to submit safety data on their

products, unlike pharmaceuticals. There's no test to pass before being labeled

" organic " or " natural. "

 

The " organic " label by the USDA means that 95 percent to 99 percent of the

product ingredients are grown organically, without pesticides. But it doesn't

mean vegan. And a product labeled vegetarian only means it isn't tested on

animals - but it could contain animal byproducts, such as milk or carmine.

 

Also, labeling a product vegan or vegetarian doesn't mean it's all-natural. Some

vegan and vegetarian products include preservatives such as parabens, which are

allowed by the FDA but have been found in some studies to mimic estrogen and

disrupt the hormone system in rats. Shampoos and body washes also can include

sodium lauryl sulfates, which is what creates lather, but can be a skin and eye

irritant, according to federal government reviews.

 

" The terms natural, organic, vegan - someone needs to define them; there're just

no standards, " said Ann Garrity, founder of the Organic Diva Web site.

 

Garrity started the Web site to parse and promote the many products out there.

The products on the site are not all vegan, but they do not include parabens or

sulfates and have not been tested on animals, she said.

 

" Right now, people want a product that's effective and that's going to make them

look good, " she said.

 

For Ebner, it's not just a matter of keeping out the goat's milk or beeswax. On

a recent Tuesday, a potential vendor came in and asked if she'd be interested in

a children's line of products.

 

Sure, Ebner said. But the entire ingredient list had to be on the bottle. There

could be no parabens, no sulfates, and she had to know the product's process -

nothing could be derived from petroleum. And if it's in a blue or green glass

container, that's even better - it keeps out sunlight which can cause

deterioration.

 

Many of Ebner's customers come into the salon because they've had allergies to

certain products, or they've read a study about the dangers of certain

chemicals.

 

Are most consumers asking detailed questions about parabens or the USDA organic

criteria or sulfates? No. Not yet, anyway.

 

But Wende Zomnir, cofounder and creative director of Urban Decay cosmetics, a

national cosmetics company based in California and sold in stores like Sephora

and Ulta, is addressing such concerns - sometimes before they're voiced. When

the company began 13 years ago, it focused on products that were cruelty-free,

including makeup brushes made from synthetic materials instead of animal hair.

 

The company began fielding an increasing number of questions from vegans about

their products. In March 2006, Urban Decay launched a vegan line on its Web

site. Now it has more than 180 vegan products.

 

Some products are easier to make vegan than others, Zomnir said. Instead of

beeswax, the company can use soy wax, for example. But creating the color red

still poses a challenge. Many products use carmine, the beetle byproduct. So if

Zomnir wants a hot-pink eye shadow but can only get mauve with vegan

ingredients, sometimes the non-vegan option wins.

 

Five years from now, though, Zomnir thinks that hurdle will be cleared as well.

 

" On my desk is our first lipstick: It's dry, it's tacky, it's full of parabens, "

she said. " Now all our lipsticks are vegan, and they glide on - it's like

rubbing a stick of butter on your lips and there are no parabens, and they're

made with food flavoring and no fragrances. "

 

For vegan Jadee Klinger, a designer in an architecture firm and a Philadelphia

yoga teacher, it's not just what's in the product that's important, but how it

feels on her skin. For a long time, she said, if it was vegan, it wasn't

effective.

 

" I still want to go out and look and feel pretty, " she said. " When I'm in a bad

mood, I go to the soap aisle in Whole Foods, and almost every time I find

something new that's vegan and paraben-free.

 

" I can even go to Rite Aid and find Alba products - some of which are vegan and

they smell like coconut or pineapple. It's very tropical. "

 

 

 

 

" NOTICE: Due to Presidential Executive Orders, the National Security Agency may

have read this email without warning, warrant, or notice. They may do this

without any judicial or legislative oversight. You have no recourse nor

protection save to call for the impeachment of the current President. "

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