Actually making great beauty products using all natural ingredients is fairly easy.  The hardest part is finding the right containers and creating the labels, there is some research you will have to do as well.  You may find some people jeering at you as those who have studied
 chemistry are taught that synthesized products are chemically the 
same as nature's.  I argued that with my first chemistry teacher and I 
will tell you why.  Through out history when ever man has made a 
discovery he had a tendency to believe he discovered everything there 
was to discover and now knew it all.
Any doctor that is
 honest with you, will tell you that he can not guarantee the outcome of any treatment because there is "what usually happens" and then 
there are the people who always seem to end up being the exceptions. 
 When the human genome project was finished we found out that genes are 
more complex than we thought and they seem to work together and diseases
 can be a result of more than one gene.
Okay now I 
digressed from my topic.  The whole point is that I didn't believe 
everything I was taught was the absolute and complete truth for two 
reasons.  One is that nature is so complex and the other thing is who knows if we
can detect everything in an atom or not.  It turns out 
that physicist have found out that what was believed to be empty space 
really was not.  It was just that we couldn't detect what is between the
 electrons, neutrons and protons.  They call those things really funny 
names like quarks and leptons and then there is the matter of anti 
matter.  Yep that's a pun. Oh and than dark matter is also being 
studied.
Okay so now you have an idea of why I have my 
point of view.  So now onto how simple it is to moisturize you skin, 
visibly reduce wrinkles and possibly create a mood with a perfume.
First
 you need to decide which oils or butters you would like to use.  If you
 want to make lip balms in stick form you will need a bit of wax as 
well.  You can find recipes and suggestions everywhere all over the 
internet.  The amazing part of all of this is the controversy.  I will 
admit some people do go too far when making promises.  But remember what
 I said about absolutes and the intricate differences between one human 
being and another (even when related). 
Basically for 
butters you will most likely need to heat them up gently, then carefully
 measure any oils you want to combine with the butter, oils are best 
weighed rather than measured (some oils need to soak for a bit in a warm
 water bath).  Also some oils are delicate and shouldn't be added to 
melted butter that is piping hot.  Most sites that sell these types of 
items will tell you the minimum and maximum percentage that should be 
used.  If you are using essential oils, please be very careful.  Some 
are extremely sensitive to heat and the percentage should never be more 
than 3% for a healthy person (excluding children and the elderly).
If
 you want to add essential oils into your personally crafted product, 
then here is what you need to know.  First off essential oils are 
generally sold in mls, 30 mls is equal to one ounce and 20 drops is 
equal to 1 ml.  This gives you a basis for calculating how much you 
should add. 
So how I calculate that is if I am making 4
 oz of butter and oil mixture, then I can look at it two ways.  I can 
multiply 4 oz times 30 mls per ounce and multiply that times 0.03 (3 
percent) and that will give me the number of mls.  Or I can take the 4 
oz and multiply that by 0.03 and then multiply the result by 30.  Either
 way it should come out the same.  If you end up with an odd amount, 
then that is where you would use the information that there is 20 drops 
in one ml.  So a 1/2 ml would be 10 drops.  Oh and those drops are 
assuming that you are using a reducer that usually comes with essential 
oils (unless you purchase a really huge quantity).  If you don't get a 
reduce then purchase some 15 ml bottles with reducers, not sure who all 
sells them but I know that Wyndmere does.
When you read
 some books on aromatherapy you can get easily confused because 
different books say different oils do different things.  The truth is 
that some essential oils are multi taskers and very complex molecules. 
 Some of the molecules and their behaviors have now been identified. 
 Some of so complex that they can not be generalized into a specific 
functional group's behavior.
The toughest is the mood 
and mental/emotional oils.  What relaxes one person can actually have an
 opposite affect on someone else.  I tried a euphoric bath oil blend and
 it almost put me to sleep.  My daughter drinks coffee and gets really 
tired because she has ADD or is it ADHD, which ever.  So that gives you a
 taste of what you can do and how complex it all can be.  Just want to 
share one other little fact.  My boyfriend has an aunt who swears that 
the only thing that has ever helped her chapped lips was Vaseline (which
 is a petroleum product).
 
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