Orglamix – Lovely Makeup – Awesome Service

Posted on 27th January 2010 in Green/eco-friendly, Life, Opinions, Reviews, Shopping, skin care

     A few months ago I started a hunt on etsy to find someone whom provided safe cosmetics. I read through countless ingredients list, profile pages. I managed to narrow it down to what I was looking for specifically – mineral foundation and eyeshadow. Which really, only narrowed it down a little. I eventually decided to try a sample pack from a little shop called Orglamix. I liked what she said, her ingredients lists, and the pictures were just so fetching!
     I love her stuff! I’ve ordered from her several times in the last few months. My makeup case has been recreated without chemicals. Cheri is my makeup girl!
     In December I ran out of my foundation so I ordered the large size for winter color. And got it, along with a couple of sample eyeshadows. Lovely! (The other time I ordered from her she sent a sample as well. I love samples!)
     Then yesterday, Rick got the mail and brought me yet another package. I wasn’t expecting anything. I already had my handmade shoes delivered a week ago. (Yes, handmade! With vintage fabric! I’m in love with them and will eventually do a post on them in the future.) I opened the package to find two of my foundation color! With the order form from December. I was confused to say the least. Today, I sent her a message and asked what I should do. I offered to pay for them, ship them back, whatever she wanted me to do. She sent me a quick note that it was a mistake, but don’t worry, they were on her! I still feel strange about keeping them. But since I plan on ordering from her indefinitely, she will definitely get more money from me. (I wish there was a way to tip through paypal)
     I wanted to tell everyone whom reads my little blog that Cheri at Orglamix is super awesome! Thank you Cheri for your kindness, and great service!

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My hair experiments – Modern Hippy Way

Posted on 6th November 2009 in Green/eco-friendly

     (August)
     In the last few months I’ve noticed my hair getting more brittle and looking less healthy. I’ve had very little spendable money in the last few months so I put off doing anything. Then I had a chat with a friend whom brought something back to my attention. She says that washing your hair daily is hard on it. I’ve heard this but never worried until recently. She washes her hair only a couple of times in a week. To clarify, she only uses shampoo a couple of times in a week. She still gets it wet and runs her fingers through it to spread out the oils. Her hair always looks fabulous. So, while we were camping I tried it out. The first shower I didn’t wash my hair with shampoo. I had washed it the night before we left so there was no product in it. It didn’t seem too gross – though I could still feel the oil. The next day I did wash my hair and could tell not all the oil had washed away. My hair was super soft and shiny. About a week after we got back from our trip, while I was twiddling my thumbs – work hours were cut back to nothing – I decided to give it a good try.
     My friend said that after awhile of washing every other day, her head produced less oil. Then she let it go 2 days before washing and it gradually adjusted the oil production again. At first it was gross and super oily, but her body regulated itself. I had heard of this relating to body oil, such as on the face. I have super oily skin, no problem with dry skin here! When I was going through puberty I washed my face too much and it got grossly oily. After I stopped washing it so much it decreased a little, to something more tolerable – though still pubescent oily.
     My friend also mentioned that her hair doesn’t tangle anymore. The natural oils seem to keep her hair silky and knot free. I want that! Sometimes I have dreads on the bottom layer of my hair at the end of the day! I don’t want dreads, they aren’t for me. Some people can pull them off. I am not one of them – nor do I want to try. So letting my hair oil up a bit may be worth the constant breaking from untangling “knotty” hair.

     I’m about 6 days into my experiment. It’s easy to comb through my hair now! I love that! I’m on an every other day regime. The no wash days have been interesting. I’ve felt gross, but perhaps it’s just my obsessiveness, not actually being gross. The days I don’t wash I rinse and massage my scalp. Rinsing my hair helps to distribute the oil through my hair. I do use some conditioner as an extra guarantee that tangles will come out. Yesterday was my first glimpse into what sort of hair I may get at the end of this. It was so healthy looking that Rick noticed it. My hair isn’t tangling at all now. It’s so exciting!
Aside from not using shampoo every day I’ve tried not to use any hair spray. I did one day, a no wash day – that was the disaster day that I used too much conditioner. The fly-aways are tolerable. I’m rediscovering things to do with my hair that don’t require spray or that won’t show how greasy I feel my hair can get. Braids, pigtails and little messy buns help to control my long hair now.
Stay tuned for an update on my hair experiment. I want to try to give it thorough cleaning using oil! Haha, sounds crazy huh? Well, we’ll find out!

     Current:
     It’s in November, I’ve been doing my hair experiment so long that is it no longer an experiment but habit. I’m washing my hair every two days now. I feel pretty good about it. My scalp is producing less oil. Sometimes the second day I don’t wash I feel a little funky but if I remember to work my natural oils through the whole length of my hair it’s fine. (I have super long hair, so when I’m lazy, it’s challenging to make sure I got my whole head massaged and natural oils distributed.)
     I recently did the “oil cleaning oil” experiment. Several placed mentioned that using something like jojoba or coconut oil can help to further clean the scalp in a safe, non-drying way. Since jojoba isn’t actually an oil but a liquid wax resembling our own natural sebum (oil) I thought it might be the better choice. So I took a really long shower. First, I applied the oil to wet hair and worked it all over my scalp, taking care to make sure everything was even and massaging it in. (Massage helps with desquamation of the skin. Got to get those dead skin cells off so new healthy stuff can surface. It also increases circulation which is paramount for healthy tissue and thus scalp and hair.)
     Then I just went along with my shower normally. At the end, I massage my scalp, worked it all through my hair and then used shampoo to remove. After a few shampoos, perhaps four, all of it was out and I applied conditioner to the ends of my hair just in case.
     The result: If there was any build up from product, it felt gone. In fact, my head felt naked. All the washing got rid of the jojoba and my oil, which may my hair feel very strange, almost dry. As far as I remember there was no problem with over production of oil the next day due to the washing or jojoba. In about a month I think another oil treatment might be a good idea, this time with essential oils.

     Other things: I’ve almost completely stopped using product. Perhaps, I may replenish my stock with more healthy alternatives, but I don’t need them now. As weird as this sounds, the natural oils in my hair seem to act as “gel” allowing my part to stay where it should. But I have to make sure that I spread the oils all throughout my hair and not forget, or my scalp will look oily.
     For the last two days I’ve been using an essential oil blend I made awhile ago. Though it is a little old, there should be some benefits. Once it’s gone I’ll make new, probably in a spritzer. The blend contains rosemary, ylang ylang, cedarwood or cypress( I can’t remember which), maybe some rose? It’s supposed to be good for oily skin, and hair growth. Not that I am actually loosing my hair but so much of it falls out that it can’t hurt to try.
     I also recently read a “blog post” from a friend of a friend whom mentioned that she uses apple cider vinegar on her hair. Doing my own research, I’ve found it fairly common. Apple cider vinegar is supposed to balance the pH in one’s scalp. Tomorrow, I’ll give it a try. The blog post I read said not to use it more than say once a week because it can dry it out a little. Also dilute because straight vinegar can be irritating. Also, making an herbal infusion/apple cider vinegar rinse is on the agenda. Being the herbal junky I am, my shelves are packed with home grown herbs, though adding a few more to my arsenal would be fun and beneficial.
     This journey on a more healthful road has been exciting and frustrating. Overall, my body is healthier and happier than it’s been since I was a child. All of my failed or forgotten experiments have been worth it. I’m cultivating my independence from – dare I reference the over-used term – “the Man”. I don’t need to run to a doc every time I sneeze (I’m sick at the moment, but getting better really fast). I don’t need to spend $100 on skin care products that contain ingredients that probably would show up stored in my fat and may or may not cause cancer. It’s exciting to be “rediscovering” things that maybe were common knowledge 50 or 100 years ago, that we forgot about, because we stopped trusting our instincts and started trusting narrow minded science or medicine. Don’t think I’m crazy enough to not believe science (I love science), but it’s a fact that it’s always evolving to include “new” things that we didn’t know about before, or forgot about. Until the next post about more modern hippy adventures.

My Hair Experiments – The Modern Hippy Way Part 2

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Shea butter

Posted on 21st December 2008 in Green/eco-friendly, skin care

     A couple of years ago I started doing research on making my own lotion or body butter. I bought some supplies and decided that it might be an interesting way to make money if I could. That didn’t work out the way I hoped. I was doing all the work and then I had little time when working two jobs. That holiday season I gave away a lot of the shea butter I made. It made many fans.
     Years later, I make it only for family and myself. Since Rick is without job we are planning on making and hopefully selling some here or on Ebay or in my Etsy shop, TaynneeBazaar. (Please note, at this time there is no shea butter for sale there. If you would like to buy a 4 ounce glass jar of my favorite butter, handmade by myself and Rick please use the contact me page and let me know.)
I use it daily now because I can’t use store bought lotions anymore. The preservatives and other synthetic ingredients give me a bad reaction.

     What is so great about shea?

     Shea is actually karite butter from wild, not cultivated Karite trees. It grows mostly in Western Africa. In its most unrefined shea butter is toted for having great healing properties. African women have been using it for centuries for skin, medicine and cooking. Only recently has the western world been introducing shea into it’s beauty and personal care products.
It is a great “healer”. Some of the things contained in it are familiar to us, vitamin A and E and fatty acids. An unknown one is cinnamic acid, which is what helps protect against sun damage. Vitamin’s A and E allow it to be anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial, both of which are great for skin problems like eczema, psoriasis, burns, stretch marks, scars and dandruff. Those vitamins support the skin so that it can repair its self properly. The fatty acids moisturize. It has a low melting temperature and is easily absorbed by the skin. Shea butter can also increase circulation and promotes cell regeneration.
     Unrefined shea butter has a strong smell. It can be refined to remove the scent. The argument is that if you refine it then many of the healing properties will be lost. I have the refined shea butter. I have only used that so I have not opinion about the unrefined butter, other than a strong curiousity. When I run out I plan on buying unrefined to see the difference. I think the refined stuff is great, I can only imagine how wonderful the “good stuff” is.

     Eco-friendly butter:
     Another reason I love shea butter is that it supports African women. The women do most of the work to make shea butter from harvesting to producing the butter from the seeds. It has remained very independent of outside influence. It cannot be cultivated. Since it can take 50 years for a tree to mature, the women must care for and maintain the trees. It’s good for the environment to avoid mass production or cultivations. Support shea, support your earth and your fellow woman.

     My experience with the body butter that I make has been great. I love it. Though I am still young, I do have some lines and stretch marks that have decrease as I use it more. Applying it I feel like I am “feeding” my skin. Healthy skin – healthy body. Your skin secretes sebum and some wastes. Unhealthy skin is not able to do this. Thus your body will not be “breathing” properly.
Another consideration is that almost everything that what is applied to your skin will be absorbed into your body. From there it has to be filtered out of the body. The natural filters in the body are liver, kidneys, and lymph system. If the body does not identify the substance that is put into the body, such as synthetics or altered “natural” ingredients (high fructose corn syrup is an example), the liver must work over time to clean the body out. Most of the ingredients in cheap lotions are not whole or even exist in nature. Why make your liver work harder than it needs to? It already has its work cut out for it with the alcohol, meds, and bad foods that we consume. (This is not an anti-alcohol post. I love a good drink, but know what it does to my body.)
     Choose something nice for you skin. Treat it with respect, give it natural and when possible organic “food”. Look through your beauty items. Can you pronounce those ingredients? Do you know why they are there? Are they “natural”? Or even safe? Look them up – you’ll be surprised what you learn.

     What beauty products do you use on a daily basis? Could you give them up for a more natural option?

     For a request of a jar of shea butter please click through to my “Contact Me” page and send me a note! And as always thanks for stopping by!

     The following is a site I found that sells fair trade shea butter. I have not purchased from them so do some research before you buy, but it looks good so far. Let me know if you have purchased from them already or if you decide to, I would love to know. I’m getting low and will have to purchase again in the next couple of months.Pure, unrefined shea butter

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Olive oil is not just for cooking

Posted on 17th December 2008 in Green/eco-friendly, skin care



     Olive oil is not just for cooking. In spa class, we discussed the different oils that could be used as carrier oils for essential oils. Olive oil was among the other oils discussed. Out of spa class olive oil is toted for its health benefits in and on the body as well. It is high in omega 3 fatty acids, which are natural anti-inflammatory agents. Olives are also high in anti-oxidants. Recently, the beauty industry has been tapping into the ancient oil that has been used for centuries. It is very moisturizing, great for sensitive skin, I love it. I have eczema on my hands and another form on my upper arms. This more natural form of a moisturizing agent has worked very well when my poor arms were red this summer. I pulled out my bottle of the green oil when I noticed my hands were cracked on all side and getting very red a couple of days ago. And took a hot bath.
     The Olive Oil Source has a good bit of information about this little fruit.

     How to use this lovely oil:
• One version of application is in a hot bath. Pour out one or two tablespoons into a small bowl. Draw a hot bath. Apply the oil wherever you want or need it. Try to keep whatever part of your body, arm or foot, under the water. It forces the “good stuff” deeper into your skin.
• If you want add some essential oils. Be sure that the oils you use are high quality. You can get high quality oils from Samara Botane. For the blend to be more effective use an oil like rose that has great effects on skin. The heat from the water will help to force the essential oils deeper into the skin and with it will go the oil. And unlike baby oil, also known as mineral oil, unless you have an allergy this will not give you zits.
• You can of course just apply directly as a lotion. You could combine other oils with it, such as jojoba oil. Or melt shea butter or something else like it, blend together and create your own body butter.

     Consider using this oil in cooking and for skin care so you make it through the winter with fewer cracks and red spots.
     Also, on the eco side of things, if you buy organic olive oil it is better for the environment. As long as you don’t get a blended oil you won’t have to worry about poor ingredients or synthetics. Buy in a glass bottle and you won’t be using plastic.

Photo from: Visit Messinia

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Beauty Without Cruelty

Posted on 1st October 2008 in Green/eco-friendly, Reviews

I love this company! As my other posts have said I’m having quite a lot of trouble with my skin. Deciding to switch away from my former skin care line was long time coming. A couple of the products were okay but most of them seemed to clog my pores and make me break out horribly. I have also become more concerned with the origins of my skin care products. I don’t like synthetics and definitely don’t want to use something that has animal products in it or may have been tested on animals.
This company’s name is straight to the point, “No cruelty”. Within a week my poor skin was clearing up! I still get a couple now and again due to hormonal changes. Nothing like I had all summer long.
Check out their website! It is fairly extensive site listing various products their ingredients and their story/philosophy. Support a company that has values and treat your skin to real ingredients that will often be organic. Oh and of course they are vegetarian.Beauty Without Cruelty
They have a cosmetics I have yet to try and I’ll let you all know how they feel. If you use them leave some love and suggestions for other good lines.

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Natural Skin Care – Eczema treatment, a hippy approach.

Posted on 19th July 2008 in Green/eco-friendly

Being a bit of a hippy I prefer to try natural things at home to maintain or better my skin. Most of my life after puberty has been spent fighting acne and other skin problems. I have acne on my face and neck. It’s not nearly as bad as it was several years ago. I also have something on my upper arms. I’m not sure what it is, might be a form of eczema. I’ve never been to a dermatologist for it. My mother-in-law, whom is a nurse, guessed that is what it was. I looked at her medical dictionary and it has pictures that match my arms under the “eczema” page. I did have it on my hands as a child, very badly, left my young hands looking about 10 years older than they were. They still look old and wrinkly. I used to hate it. Now I think, well I’m going to end up wrinkly anyway, my hands just have a head start.

I’m getting side tracked. So my arms used to cause me a lot of worries, I was so self-conscience about it. I think I’ve worked through it. But that doesn’t mean that I don’t try to get rid of it on occasion. I experiment with it. This was my experiment two nights ago. I took a nice hot bath and made my own salt scrub. The salt scrub consisted of the following: Epson salt, olive oil, essential oils, tea tree oil, rose gallica, cedarwood atlas, cypress, sweet orange. I’m not sure of the amount of drops other than I tried to put just one of rose, it can be overwhelming. One or two of cedar or cypress, I can never remember which one it is, but one of them is way overwhelming for me. I just need to smell it and I’ll add it later. I’m going to work on perfecting this recipe because well, the next morning my arms looked so much better. There were still bumps and scars but it wasn’t inflamed anymore and there weren’t as many bumps that I could pop. I know it’s gross but I do pop them sometimes. And yes I know that causes them to scar sometimes.

I was amazed! Two days later, my arms still look great. I’m going to write everything down and slowly eliminate ingredients one at a time, to see which ingredient(s) it is that helped so much. It might turn out to be the combination of everything. I’m so excited. I’ll write it all down and post it later.

On a side note, I do end up smelling like a garden. I’m okay with that, but if anyone else has issues with smelling like nature than it isn’t for you. Also, be careful with what essential oils you use. I am a certified aromatherapist and have done plenty of experiments on myself after double-checking for cautionary notes. I can’t remember everything and rather than burning myself I check my handy-dandy essential oil book. And before I complete this, I’ll say that most essential oils need to be mixed with carrier oil such as olive oil or jojoba oil. Some can burn or cause irritation. So do research before hand. The book I have on hand all the time is The Encyclopedia of Essential Oils by Julia Lawless, very good, very informative. There are websites where you can buy them and get information on the essential oils. But be careful, you want good quality oils. Better results come from better quality oils.

This is what I mixed up this morning and I used it in the shower, just on my arms.

Salt scrub with olive oil

1 tsp olive oil

1 drop rose gallica

4 drops orange

4 drops tea tree

2 drops cypress

1 drop cedarwood atlas

Epson salt*

*I used maybe1/8 cup of Epson salt. I’m not sure of exact measurement I just wanted enough salt to absorb all the oil. If you have too much then the oil won’t cover the salt.

So far my arms are still looking great. I might also decide to use this for a week and then take an ingredient out and try that for a week. I’ll update this later.

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