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Browsing the archives for the Basics tag
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You do not know what to look for when choosing cosmetics? Need some advice on caring for your skin? Here are eight tips to help your skin look and feel better. 1) Select moisturizers containing oils. Lotions, creams and body oils that are used must be made with vegetable oils, not mineral oil. Vegetable oils (like olive oil, sweet almond oil, corn oil, etc.) contain fatty acids that help moisturize and soften skin. Mineral oil is derived from petroleum and contains nothing that helps nourish the skin. 2) Look for herbs and products in herbal cosmetics. Herbs and their derivatives (essential oils, extracts, infusions) contain natural chemicals which soothe, tone and help condition the skin. Two herbs that are particularly useful in cosmetics natural lavender and tea tree. The essential oils of lavender and tea tree are two of sweet, natural antiseptics. 3) Once a week soak your feet in warm water and gently exfoliate dead skin with a pumice stone. Followed by moisturizing your feet with a natural oil or lotion foot. 4) Every week soak in a bath of bath salts. Salt, especially salts extracted from the Dead Sea in the Middle East, are rich in minerals and help draw impurities from the skin. 5) After a shower or bath, seal in moisture by using an oil or body lotion based on natural vegetable oils. 6) If you have spots and dry skin, moisturize your skin morning and evening with products containing vegetable oils that are rich in essential fatty acids. Essential fatty acids help to soften and moisturize the skin and may also help relieve minor irritations. Vegetable oils that contain large amounts of essential fatty acids include corn oil, sunflower oil, safflower oil, borage, blackcurrant and evening primrose oil. 7) Look for toners and astringents that are made without ethyl alcohol or isopropyl alcohol. These ingredients are solvents that very dry skin. Ololade Franklin publishes Making Good smell (TM), the newsletter of cosmetics handmade, soaps and perfumes. For information about Making good scents (TM), visit http://www. MakingGoodScents. com
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