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Jadryga

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Posts posted by Jadryga

  1. Candle Man, I just took a look at your link... it's actually Vitamin E. The INCI name for naturally sourced vit E is d-alpha tocopherol, easy to mix up. Synthetic vit E is dl-alpha tocopherol.

    Ran a quick search for "liquid vitamin D" and got this:

    http://www.tjclarkinc.com/liquid_vitamin_d.htm

    They seem to be the only company that sells liquid vitamin D as far as I can tell, though I didn't really search too hard. The recommended dosage is in teaspoons, so definitely no softgels :DIt's about $10 for 235ml or so.

    EDIT: Oh, they've got liquid vit A too, though I'm not sure if it's a good price for you. About $12.50 for 235ml.

    http://www.tjclarkinc.com/liquid_vitamin_a.htm

  2. Just hazarding a guess, could it be simply an oil/water mix with no emulsifier, so the oil settles to the bottom and the water stays on top? I know it sounds fairly simple, but as far as I can tell, a lot of commercial bath products are, but with pretty packaging :P Could always experiment by putting some clear oil (grapeseed maybe) and milky water into a bottle and seeing what you get. Like I said though, just a guess!

    For the other one, MMS sells a liquid soap base, and a suspending liquid soap base that can suspend mica, jojoba beads and stuff. I presume there's some ingredient that differentiates them... I'll take a look and see.

    EDIT: Ahh, found it. Through a comparison of the suspending liquid bases MMS and Brambleberry both sell, I managed to isolate xanthan gum. It's a highly efficient viscosity modifier and suspending agent that's completely water soluble. Hope it helps!

  3. Wow, those look really good!

    I like the brown swirled one on the right side of the second row (peppermint chocolate?), though the goatmilk and shea one looks delish too, rather like a huge piece of toffee I'd like to sink my teeth into. Yum! :D

    Never actually tried CP, but these are inspiring.

  4. I don't know about caffeine causing death if applied topically... maybe if you used pure caffeine... but if it's in coffee or guarana extract, I doubt we absorb enough caffeine through our skin to rival the amount of caffeine we ingest from an espresso. There's a lot of hype so far about caffeine helping with fluid retention when applied topically though, so might want to consider guarana extract or even better, cocoa.

    Cocoa = antioxidants, caffeine, yummilicious smell. Biotherm uses that stuff in their Abdo-choc...

    Then there's the seaweed extract someone mentioned earlier.

    Here's a company with a pretty extensive botanical extract range, though they're NZ-based.

    http://www.aromaticsandmore.com/products/botanical_extracts1.html

  5. Bit late, but...

    A lot of flavor oils sold out there are unsweetened though, and are essentially tasteless. I read somewhere that it's really the sweetener + fragrance that tricks us into thinking we're tasting a real flavor. So maybe without sweetener (stevia, agave, saccharin, etc) there won't be taste, so that might not encourage licking so much? There's so much fragrance in commercial products as is anyhow, like Laura said.

    Tea tree oils are toxic to cats though, and chocolate is supposedly bad for dogs (substitute with carob), so might want to stay away from those :P

    Lots of natural pet shampoo recipes recommend citronella, lavender, peppermint and pennyroyal (small amounts) though all eos can be toxic if ingested in large amounts. I don't think it should be that much of a problem if they're rinse-off, no? I'd worry more if it was a leave-on.

  6. Vit E acetate can exist in both natural and synthetic forms. It's simply chemically more stable. Problem is, there's also research that shows it's not as effective for your skin, so if you're looking for skin vitamins, best to go with the original tocopherols. D-alpha is natural, dl-alpha is synthetic. For preventing rancidity, Carebear's right, mixed tocopherols are the most powerful, since gammas mixed with alphas are most effective as opposed to pure alphas, though acetates should work as well.

  7. I read somewhere that heating it that high isn't good though... I think it was on the Shea Butter section in Fixed Oils in the MMS online catalog.

    Whipping makes it fluffier because you're whipping air into it so it becomes aerated (like whipped cream). Not too sure if that helps with graining. Some sites recommend quick cooling to reduce graininess.

  8. What's the purpose of the veg glycerin though? To improve spreadability?

    I was contemplating adding the glycerin because I was thinking of experimenting... since the glycerin can dissolve some water-based extracts, I could maybe add some extracts in glycerin without needing to add water into my whipped butter recipe. Opinions?

    EDIT: Aha! Found it on Snowdrift.

    • glycerin lends a smooth and creamy texture
    • glycerin and Natrasorb together provide creaminess without greasiness

    Can anyone lend some credence to this? :P

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