And, is it beneficial or detrimental?
All those long Latin or Greek names. Are they natural or not?
Do you need to be a cosmetic chemist
to make sense of it all?
Take alcohol for instance
Bad for the liver and the skin, isn’t
it?
Or is it?
If you’re as old as me, you might remember the luridly-fluorescent toners teenage girls bought in the 1980s. They stripped every last drop of oil from your skin, which then responded by overproducing oil, so you used more toner. (Great sales model, but not so fab for your face)
And that cycle repeated, ad infinitum.
So, if you’re reading an ingredient
label, and you see alcohol listed, don’t just assume that the product will be
drying, as it’s not always the case.
Because, alcohol (as you might already
know) comes in many different forms. And I don’t just mean tequila or vodka.
Some sorts of alcohol are great to
have in your skin care
They’re usually called fatty alcohols
and include ingredients like cetyl, cetearyl or stearyl alcohol, and guess
what? they're derived from fats. (The name is a bit of a giveaway, there, isn’t
it?)
They are also called esters, and
Beeswax, for instance, contains about 50 percent monoester, while carnauba wax
is roughly 85 percent ester. And both those ingredients are generally
considered good for your skin, not drying.
Then there’s something you might
recognise - Tocopherol. (The -ol ending shows it’s also an alcohol.)
α-Tocopherol is also known as Vitamin E, which is generally considered
beneficial for the skin, and not at all drying. In fact, fatty alcohols have an
ability to lock moisture into the skin to form a protective barrier.
That sounds ok, doesn’t it?
The type of alcohol you want to avoid
like the (current) plague, at least on your face, is SD40 (AKA isopropyl alcohol).
This is great for sterilising surfaces and is often in cheap hand sanitisers,
which is why your hands might feel mega dry, if you use the ones supplied in
shop entrances, rather than carry your own.
Ingredients lists can be a bit of a
minefield, so you may need some help decoding what’s good for your skin, what’s
not and how you can look younger for longer.
Rather than turning to drink, at the
thought of how complicated it is, why not get some help from a professional?
Message jane@theorganicbeautician.com
to book yourself a consultation with an expert
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