I'm all for just oils and single ingredient products, so you can know what you are getting. I use coconut oil and cocoa butter.
For tough cracked places, I use this homemade salve. I've put this up on another list, but I don't think I've put it up here.
Here's the note I sent earlier elsewhere:
I don't know about you, but I
have no luck finding a hand lotion or cream I can use. And let's face it, in
the wintertime, we all need a little moisturizing on our tired dry paws. This
is not something you would slather all over, more like just getting those
terrible cracking spots.
Finally I found this recipe (see notes below):
Heavy
Duty Gardeners Homemade recipe for Hand Lotion/ Cream
2 Tablespoons of shaved beeswax
1/2 Teaspoon of carnuba wax
2 Tablespoons of jojoba oil (or what you like)
1 Teaspoon of aloe vera gel
10 drops of Vitamin E oil ( or 4 capsules)
1 drop of your favorite essential oil for fragrance
Melt the first four ingredients in a stainless steel pot on the stove or use a
glass pyrex cup in the microwave. Remove from heat and beat until cool, adding
the Vitamin E oil before mixture thickens. Continue beating until this mixture
becomes creamy. Add your favorite essential oil, continue beating until cream
has completely cooled. Spoon your cream into a jar, store in a cool dark place.
It's easy and quick once you have everything at hand. Just beat it with a fork;
a whisk is too hard to clean.
I used coconut oil in place of the jojoba -- can't tolerate it. I made this
yesterday, and I halved the amounts. I got enough to fill a little tiny jam
jar. That will last a while. I also did not put any essential oil in. If I had
peppermint handy, I'd try that since my system likes mint.
And the carnauba has a minor stink, not chemical, just not pleasant. It's not
enough to bother me, but it would be nice to cover it up.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnauba_wax
in case you want to know carnauaba is a natural wax from a plant. I got it at
Sinopia, which is local to me. They are at www.sinopia.com
then click on Binders then Natural Wax. You far less than the smallest amount
for one batch. Beeswax is there too.
Also, I don't have or use a microwave, so I did this stove-top. The pot gets
clean with hot water and maybe a soak with detergent, all washable though it
might not seem so at first.
Hope this helps; I'm just happy to have something I can use!
--- On Thu, 7/9/09, Rachel Bleckman <rerephoto@...> wrote:
From: Rachel Bleckman <rerephoto@...> Subject: Re: [BayCanaryGrapevine] lotions To: "BayCanaryGrapevine@yahoogroups.com" <BayCanaryGrapevine@yahoogroups.com> Date: Thursday, July 9, 2009, 3:32 PM
Put avacado oil all over body while still
Very wet. I keep mine in the shower. Then
Hang out in a towel for a while and let it
Absorb. This is really only for very dry skin.
Also taking Magick Botanicals lotion and
Mixing it with oil makes It much more moisterizing.
After considering all the info I got, I have decided to stick with oils, shea butter, or making my own. It seems like the commercially prepared lotions are always going to have one or two chemicals in the mix. I tried some shea I had around the house and that seems to be doing the trick. I hate feeling like I am an oil slick though...
I used to use Alba botanicals before I became sensitive. After I became sensitive, I noticed that I could smell the lotion. I didn't think it was bothering me but decided to remove it from my products as a precaution. When I decided I wanted some lotion, I thought it should be fine, since I used it last year... but it's nasty. For the record, I bought the small size bottle and it was not good for me. Evelyn
-- When I have a terrible need of - shall I say the word - religion. Then I go out and paint the stars. Vincent Van Gogh
I've tried adding aloe vera to my wax/oil mixes, and it always separates out when I do. It's just too watery. Is there some trick you discovered to get it to mix, or has this never been an issue for you, Bart?
--- On Thu, 7/9/09, Bart <yaahoobart@...> wrote:
From: Bart <yaahoobart@...> Subject: Re: [BayCanaryGrapevine] lotions - homemade gardener's salve To: BayCanaryGrapevine@yahoogroups.com Date: Thursday, July 9, 2009, 4:42 PM
I'm all for just oils and single ingredient products, so you can know what you are getting. I use coconut oil and cocoa butter.
For tough cracked places, I use this homemade salve. I've put this up on another list, but I don't think I've put it up here.
Here's the note I sent earlier elsewhere:
I don't know about you, but I
have no luck finding a hand lotion or cream I can use. And let's face it, in
the wintertime, we all need a little moisturizing on our tired dry paws. This
is not something you would slather all over, more like just getting those
terrible cracking spots.
Finally I found this recipe (see notes below):
Heavy
Duty Gardeners Homemade recipe for Hand Lotion/ Cream
2 Tablespoons of shaved beeswax
1/2 Teaspoon of carnuba wax
2 Tablespoons of jojoba oil (or what you like)
1 Teaspoon of aloe vera gel
10 drops of Vitamin E oil ( or 4 capsules)
1 drop of your favorite essential oil for fragrance
Melt the first four ingredients in a stainless steel pot on the stove or use a
glass pyrex cup in the microwave. Remove from heat and beat until cool, adding
the Vitamin E oil before mixture thickens. Continue beating until this mixture
becomes creamy. Add your favorite essential oil, continue beating until cream
has completely cooled. Spoon your cream into a jar, store in a cool dark place.
It's easy and quick once you have everything at hand. Just beat it with a fork;
a whisk is too hard to clean.
I used coconut oil in place of the jojoba -- can't tolerate it. I made this
yesterday, and I halved the amounts. I got enough to fill a little tiny jam
jar. That will last a while. I also did not put any essential oil in. If I had
peppermint handy, I'd try that since my system likes mint.
And the carnauba has a minor stink, not chemical, just not pleasant. It's not
enough to bother me, but it would be nice to cover it up.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnauba_wax
in case you want to know carnauaba is a natural wax from a plant. I got it at
Sinopia, which is local to me. They are at www.sinopia.com
then click on Binders then Natural Wax. You far less than the smallest amount
for one batch. Beeswax is there too.
Also, I don't have or use a microwave, so I did this stove-top. The pot gets
clean with hot water and maybe a soak with detergent, all washable though it
might not seem so at first.
Hope this helps; I'm just happy to have something I can use!
--- On Thu, 7/9/09, Rachel Bleckman <rerephoto@...> wrote:
From: Rachel Bleckman <rerephoto@...> Subject: Re: [BayCanaryGrapevine] lotions To: "BayCanaryGrapevine@yahoogroups.com" <BayCanaryGrapevine@yahoogroups.com> Date: Thursday, July 9, 2009, 3:32 PM
Put avacado oil all over body while still
Very wet. I keep mine in the shower. Then
Hang out in a towel for a while and let it
Absorb. This is really only for very dry skin.
Also taking Magick Botanicals lotion and
Mixing it with oil makes It much more moisterizing.
After considering all the info I got, I have decided to stick with oils, shea butter, or making my own. It seems like the commercially prepared lotions are always going to have one or two chemicals in the mix. I tried some shea I had around the house and that seems to be doing the trick. I hate feeling like I am an oil slick though...
I used to use Alba botanicals before I became sensitive. After I became sensitive, I noticed that I could smell the lotion. I didn't think it was bothering me but decided to remove it from my products as a precaution. When I decided I wanted some lotion, I thought it should be fine, since I used it last year... but it's nasty. For the record, I bought the small size bottle and it was not good for me. Evelyn
-- When I have a terrible need of - shall I say the word - religion. Then I go out and paint the stars. Vincent Van Gogh
I've only made this one time. Still using the result of that event! It wasn't an issue, all mixed well, and I have a salve that's stiffer than cold coconut oil and softer than chapstick.
It helps. Given the qualifiers below, I like it.
--- On Thu, 7/9/09, isis feral <isisferal@...> wrote:
I've tried adding aloe vera to my wax/oil mixes, and it always separates out when I do. It's just too watery. Is there some trick you discovered to get it to mix, or has this never been an issue for you, Bart?
--- On Thu, 7/9/09, Bart <yaahoobart@yahoo. com> wrote:
From: Bart <yaahoobart@yahoo. com> Subject: Re: [BayCanaryGrapevine ] lotions - homemade gardener's salve To: BayCanaryGrapevine@ yahoogroups. com Date: Thursday, July 9, 2009, 4:42 PM
I'm all for just oils and single ingredient products, so you can know what you are getting. I use coconut oil and cocoa butter.
For tough cracked places, I use this homemade salve. I've put this up on another list, but I don't think I've put it up here.
Here's the note I sent earlier elsewhere:
I don't know about you, but I
have no luck finding a hand lotion or cream I can use. And let's face it, in
the wintertime, we all need a little moisturizing on our tired dry paws. This
is not something you would slather all over, more like just getting those
terrible cracking spots.
Finally I found this recipe (see notes below):
Heavy
Duty Gardeners Homemade recipe for Hand Lotion/ Cream
2 Tablespoons of shaved beeswax
1/2 Teaspoon of carnuba wax
2 Tablespoons of jojoba oil (or what you like)
1 Teaspoon of aloe vera gel
10 drops of Vitamin E oil ( or 4 capsules)
1 drop of your favorite essential oil for fragrance
Melt the first four ingredients in a stainless steel pot on the stove or use a
glass pyrex cup in the microwave. Remove from heat and beat until cool, adding
the Vitamin E oil before mixture thickens. Continue beating until this mixture
becomes creamy. Add your favorite essential oil, continue beating until cream
has completely cooled. Spoon your cream into a jar, store in a cool dark place.
It's easy and quick once you have everything at hand. Just beat it with a fork;
a whisk is too hard to clean.
I used coconut oil in place of the jojoba -- can't tolerate it. I made this
yesterday, and I halved the amounts. I got enough to fill a little tiny jam
jar. That will last a while. I also did not put any essential oil in. If I had
peppermint handy, I'd try that since my system likes mint.
And the carnauba has a minor stink, not chemical, just not pleasant. It's not
enough to bother me, but it would be nice to cover it up.
http://en.wikipedia .org/wiki/ Carnauba_ wax
in case you want to know carnauaba is a natural wax from a plant. I got it at
Sinopia, which is local to me. They are at www.sinopia. com
then click on Binders then Natural Wax. You far less than the smallest amount
for one batch. Beeswax is there too.
Also, I don't have or use a microwave, so I did this stove-top. The pot gets
clean with hot water and maybe a soak with detergent, all washable though it
might not seem so at first.
Hope this helps; I'm just happy to have something I can use!
--- On Thu, 7/9/09, Rachel Bleckman <rerephoto@earthlink .net> wrote:
After considering all the info I got, I have decided to stick with oils, shea butter, or making my own. It seems like the commercially prepared lotions are always going to have one or two chemicals in the mix. I tried some shea I had around the house and that seems to be doing the trick. I hate feeling like I am an oil slick though...
I used to use Alba botanicals before I became sensitive. After I became sensitive, I noticed that I could smell the lotion. I didn't think it was bothering me but decided to remove it from my products as a precaution. When I decided I wanted some lotion, I thought it should be fine, since I used it last year... but it's nasty. For the record, I bought the small size bottle and it was not good for me. Evelyn
-- When I have a terrible need of - shall I say the word - religion. Then I go out and paint the stars. Vincent Van Gogh