Cosmetology

Facial Moisturizers in Your Kitchen

Facial Moisturizers in Your Kitchen Cabinets

People spend much money for creams, serums, and moisturizers that, ounce-for-ounce, cost significantly more than natural ingre­di­ents on kitchen shelves.

Dual-Purpose Oils

Experts estimate the value of the skin care products market to be $183.03 billion by 2025. People spend enormous amounts of money on creams, serums, and moisturi­zers. What often makes them appealing is one or more recogniz­able natural ingredi­ents. Often, these ingredi­ents are a few aisles away in the same grocery store and, ounce-for-ounce, cost much less.

Now imagine the advantages of shopping for cooking oils and butter with an eye on which ones also benefit your skin. When you get home, you can portion out some for each purpose.

Cocoa Butter

Cocoa butter is a non-dairy stable fat used in both sweet and savory recipes, chocolate, as well as facial and body lotions. Since it has a high smoke point, it is also great to use when searing meat at high tempera­tures. In addition to moisturizing skin, cocoa butter helps fade blemishes.

Coconut Oil

Facial Kitchen Moisturizers

For skin care, organic expeller-pressed is better than lower-price refined coconut oil. Manufacturers extract coconut oil from the edible, fleshy “meat” of a coconut. Lauric acid, the pre­dominant medium-chain fatty acid found in coconut oil, has proven anti­bacterial, anti­viral, anti-fungal, and anti-inflammatory benefits.

Other chemical substances in coconut oil—including phyto­nutri­ents and poly­phenols—act as anti­oxidants, and have other tissue-supportive and tissue-protective properties. It’s best to apply coconut oil to your skin in the same incon­spicuous area for 3–4 days in a row to see if you have any abnormal reac­tions to it.

Olive Oil

Although the real nutrition for your skin comes from what you eat, topical applica­tion of organic extra-virgin olive oil benefits skin. “While olive oil generally has high safety and low comedo­genic ratings, for people with very sensitive, dry or eczema-prone skin, olive oil can incur further damage to the skin barrier,” according to Ming Zhao, CEO of PROVEN Skincare, which creates custom beauty products. Trying to treat dryness in very sensitive, dry, or eczema-prone skin with olive oil is a flat-out no-go, she says.

Peanut Oil

Individuals with a peanut allergy may also develop an allergic response to peanut oil. When well-tolerated, you can consume peanut oil in foods to lower cholesterol and prevent heart disease and cancer. You might also apply peanut oil on the skin for arthritis, joint pain, dry skin, eczema, and other skin conditions. However, there is scarce scientific evidence to support these uses.

Almond Oil

Almond oil is both a moisturi­zer and an emollient for dermatitis, eczema, or dry skin. Some people with acne use almond oil as a moisturi­zer, often alongside topical acne medication. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) cautions that oil from moisturizers may make acne worse, but some dermatology profes­sionals recom­mend it for moisturizing. Avoid if you have nut allergies.

Avocado Mask

Avocado face mask

At-home face masks can be rejuvenating. Here is one good enough to eat from Fit Foodie Finds. It combines fresh avocado, honey, coconut oil, lemon juice, and oatmeal for exfoliation.

  • 1 tablespoon rolled oats, coarsely ground
  • 1/2 ripe avocado
  • 1 teaspoon lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon honey
  • 1 teaspoon coconut oil
  • 2 drops of your favorite essential oil (optional)
Instructions

Smashed avocado

  1. Mash half a ripe avocado in a small bowl with a fork until smooth.
  2. Pulse rolled oats in a food processor to coarsely grind. Then mix it with the mashed avocado.
  3. Blend in lemon juice, honey, coconut oil, and essential oils.
  4. Apply a few tablespoons to your clean face immediately and let sit for 15–20 minutes.
  5. Rinse off with warm water, pat dry, and follow up the mask with your favorite facial oil.

Wrap Up

You may find that alternating or mixing some of the above oils achieves the best benefit. Always test on a small, inconspicuous area before slathering on your entire face or arms. Maintain hygienic barriers between oils for cooking and skin care. Separate a portion to use in your medicine cabinet from your kitchen cabinet.

The value of boutique skin care products is that they pass testing on a variety of skin types in measurable doses. They are often blended with other ingredients by scientists to achieve optimal benefits. If you are willing to research and test yourself, you may find some economical dry-skin relief in your kitchen cabinet.

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To support the writing of useful articles about cosmetology, ClinicalPosters sells human anatomy charts, scientific posters, and other products online. You may sponsor specific articles or remit a small donation.

ClinicalPosters sells human anatomy charts, scientific posters, and other products online to offset expense of the writing useful articles about cosmetology. Slide extra posters into DeuPair Frames without removing from the wall.

ClinicalPosters sells human anatomy charts, scientific posters, and other products online. You may remit a small donation.

You can support the writing of useful articles about cosmetology by sponsoring specific articles or remitting a small donation. Visible content is optimized for device size.

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