Natural Beauty: Homemade Solutions for Glowing Skin
Dec 01, 2020 09:30AM ● By April Thompson
Skin, our largest organ, plays an important role in supporting and
protecting the rest of the body. That’s why it should be treated kindly
by using natural, chemical-free ingredients. Many U.S. beauty products
contain hidden chemicals, including dozens of ingredients that are
banned in other countries. Even products labeled “organic” or “natural”
can contain potentially harmful petrochemicals, according to the Environmental Working Group.
A
natural skincare routine doesn’t have to be complicated or expensive.
Balms, masks, scrubs and toners can be made from healthy, everyday
products already present in most homes. “Oats, yogurt, coconut oil,
honey: there are many kitchen staples that you can easily use in your
skincare routine,” says Marlene Adelmann, founder of the Herbal Academy, in Bedford, Massachusetts, and author of Botanical Skin Care Recipe Book.
As
an example, face masks can be made with ingredients from the spice
rack, including turmeric and black pepper. “One-ingredient treatments,
like a honey or yogurt mask, feel so good and are easy to make,” says Stephanie Gerber, the Nashville author of Hello Glow: 150+ Easy Natural Beauty Recipes for A Fresh New You.
Facial, body and foot scrubs are great beginner creations, according to Stephanie Tourles, author of Pure Skin Care: Nourishing Recipes for Vibrant Skin & Natural Beauty.
The Marble Falls, Texas, esthetician recommends starting with a base of
sugar or salt and adding an edible oil such as almond, plus a few drops
of an essential oil. Essential oils should be diluted—add only six to
12 drops per ounce of finished product. Her favorites are lavender, tea
tree, sweet orange and frankincense. Lemon, lime and bergamot are
phototoxic and can cause sensitivity if added to any scrub before sun
exposure.
“Scrubs are wonderful for softening,
soothing and exfoliating the skin,” Tourles says, cautioning that salt
scrubs can sting if applied after shaving or waxing. Other common
ingredients that can be added are oats, almonds or sunflower seeds
ground in a coffee grinder. When mixed with water, cream or yogurt, they
offer a moisturizing facial treatment.
Tourles
loves homemade body balms using oil and a thickener such as cocoa
butter or beeswax. “Balms are easy to make, great for kids and good for
dry cuticles and lips. You don’t have to worry about ingredients
spoiling. They condition the skin and smell great,” she says.
In
harsher weather, skin requires a little extra TLC. Tourles suggests a
hydrating winter toner made with a 50/50 mix of aloe vera juice and
rosewater. “Honey is also nice for the face and incredibly hydrating for
winter,” she says. “Simply warm a little bit, apply it to your clean
face for 20 minutes, then rinse with warm water.”
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Homemade Mask Recipes
Excerpted from Botanical Skin Care Recipe Book, by Marlene Adelmann Read More »
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“People often forget to apply more moisturizer in winter. One of
the best things you can do is exfoliate your face with a simple scrub to
slough off dry, dead skin. Use gentler ingredients for your face than
your body, like oats, baking soda or almonds ground finely,” says
Gerber. For chapped lips, she recommends a gentle exfoliant like sugar
and honey applied as an antibacterial lip scrub.
“Matcha
green tea makes a beautiful mask that astringes and tones skin. Combine
it with aloe gel and honey for some soothing moisture in the colder
months when our skin needs rejuvenation,” says Adelmann.
Some
products are best purchased from a commercial source. “You can make
many preparations at home—from masks to cleansing scrubs, cleansers,
lotions and creams—but when these recipes contain water, they have a
short shelf life. If you are looking for something with a longer shelf
life, you’re going to run into more complicated instructions
incorporating preservatives,” says Adelmann.
“Moisturizers,
creamy cleansers and hand creams have the steepest learning curve to
craft yourself,” says Tourles. “Trying to emulsify watery ingredients
like herb tea and aloe vera with oils, butters or waxes is like mixing
oil and vinegar in a salad dressing; these ingredients want to
separate.” According to Gerber, sunscreen is another product worth
buying rather than trying to make at home.
Homemade
or store-bought products aside, the best skin enhancer is a drink of
water, according to Gerber. It doesn’t get easier or more economical
than that.
Connect with Washington, D.C., freelance writer April Thompson.