How To Make Your Own Bath and Body Products The Easy Way

Posted by admin | Articles, Bath Salts & Bombs, Business Resources, Scrubs & Exfoliants, Soap Making | Thursday 12 March 2009 9:53 pm

by: Katherine Durkes

spa-basket If you think about making your own spa products - such as lotions, body washes, and exfoliating scrubs - you probably think it sounds difficult. It probably brings to mind lots of weird ingredients, chemicals, and slaving away over a hot vat of goo for hours.
After this article, you’ll know that nothing could be further from the truth! In fact, using my method (which I call The Easy Way), making your own bath and body products takes less time than going to the mall, and you get twice the quality of skin care.

The Two Ways Of Making Products - Hard and Easy
There are two ways to make your own bath and body products - The Hard Way, and The Easy Way. The Hard Way means investing a lot of time in books and trial-and-error in your kitchen, and a lot of money in ingredients. Often, you need patience and perseverance as you attempt to make a basic lotion or liquid soap, but it doesn’t come out as well as you’d hoped. Heck, you didn’t even get to the fun part, which adding the scent and color!

The Hard Way Takes Time and Practice
The Hard Way is what is taught in soapmaking classes, websites, and books. It can be fun and rewarding because of the natural ingredients and the high-quality products that result. Shea butter lotions… aloe body washes… If you are prepared to invest the time and money, and you have a lot of patience, The Hard Way does pay off. You get wonderfully moisturizing products in your favorite fragrances - even hard to find ones - that are much better than Bath and Body Works.
The problem is, The Hard Way is often incredibly discouraging to beginners. As they pour their failed body wash down the bathtub drain, most beginners start to wonder if it’s really worth the trouble. Sooner or later, they go back to the mall and pay too much for what is essentially drugstore-quality products in fancy bottles and scents.

Beginners Can Master The Easy Way
The Easy Way of making bath and body products is, well, easy! With The Easy Way, you get all the benefits - the natural ingredients, the high-quality skin care products, and your favorite scents - for only 10% the work. The Hard Way is like baking a fancy Julia Child cake recipe, but The Easy Way is more like making a cake mix.
The Easy Way uses professional unscented product bases (also called "cosmetic bases") that are specially manufactured for this purpose. These bases are made with natural ingredients, such as shea butter, avocado oil, aloe, and goats’ milk, so you still get high quality skin care, the same as if you had made the bases yourself with The Hard Way.

Quickly Make Lotion, Shower Gel, Shampoo, Scrub
You can get unscented bases for almost any liquid product you can think of: body lotion, massage cream, bath oil, shower gel, bubble bath, salon-quality shampoo and conditioner, body scrub, hand soap, and face wash.
Customize High Quality Unscented Products With Your Own Ingredients.
To these basic products, you add your own fragrance, color, and other special ingredients, such as silk proteins and botanical extracts. You can even experiment with natural anti-aging ingredients such as carrot seed oil, green tea extract, and collagen. These ingredients are what makes your products unique!

Just Like The Professionals
If you compare three bottles of shower gel from Bath and Body Works, The Body Shop, and Origins, you will see a lot of similarities in their first few ingredients. That’s because they’re all taking a basic body wash and making their own improvements on it, just like you can with The Easy Way.

About The Author

Katherine Durkes is an experienced teacher of bath and body. She runs a popular website on how to make bath and body products, as well as the Yahoo Group "Home Bath & Body." Her first e-book, "The Fast Guide To Making Bath Bombs (& Fizzies)" has over 10,000 downloads and has been featured on About.com and in Ready Made Magazine.

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Exfoliants & Facial Scrubs

Posted by admin | Scrubs & Exfoliants | Tuesday 3 March 2009 9:05 pm


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Exfoliating Sea Salt & Apricot Kernel Oil Body Scrub Recipe

Posted by admin | Scrubs & Exfoliants | Tuesday 3 March 2009 9:00 pm


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  • 2 cups coarse sea salt
  • 1/2 cup ground apricot kernel oil

Make a paste out of the sea salt and apricot kernel oil. Using your hands, a loofah or a washcloth, gently rub mixture into skin, then rinse.

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Basic Homemade Exfoliant Recipe

Posted by admin | Scrubs & Exfoliants | Tuesday 3 March 2009 8:56 pm


washing-face

  • 1 cup raw sugar
  • 1/2 cup olive oil

Mix sugar and oil together to make a paste. Using your hands, a loofah or washcloth, gently rub mixture into skin, then rinse.

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Homemade Sugar Scrubs

Posted by admin | Scrubs & Exfoliants | Tuesday 3 March 2009 8:35 pm

  • Bergamot Neroli Sugar Scrub

  • Brown Sugar Body Buff
  • Cinnamon Sugar Scrub
  • Glycerin and Honey Sugar Scrub
  • Grapefruit Sugar Scrub
  • Hawaiian Salt & Sugar Scrub
  • Homemade Sugar Scrub
  • Honey & Lemon Sugar Scrub
  • Lemon Tea Sugar Scrub
  • Oat & Brown Sugar Facial Scrub
  • Pink Grapefruit Sugar Scrub
  • Soft as Silk Body Scrub
  • Sugar Scrub - Also contains salt
  • Sugar Scrub Recipes
  • The Perfect Sugar Scrub
  • Vanilla Rose Brown Sugar Body Scrub
  • Velvet Sugar Scrub
  • Winter Survival Sugar Scrub
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    Homemade Salt Scrubs

    Posted by admin | Scrubs & Exfoliants | Tuesday 3 March 2009 8:25 pm

  • Ginger Zest Salt Scrub
  • Green Ambrosia Body Scrub
  • Hawaiian Salt & Sugar Scrub
  • Lavender Salt Glow
  • Lemon Body Scrub
  • Make Your Own Salt Scrubs
  • Peppermint Lavender Foot Glow Scrub
  • Pomegranate Salt Scrub
  • Rhassoul Sea Salt Body Scrub
  • Silky Skin and Salt Scrubs
  • Salt Glow - Formula
  • Simple & Silky Salt Scrub
  • Strawberry & Rose Body Polish
  • Sugary Silk Scrub
  • Sunrise Salt Scrub
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    Using Herbs For Skin Care


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    Infusions - The weakest of preparations, infusions are useful for hydrating the skin. Steep 1 ounce of herb leaves or flowers in 1 pint of simmering (200F) water for about 5 minutes. Do not boil. Let cool to room temperature. Soak a washcloth in some of the liquid, then apply it to the skin. You may also use an infusion as a toner, soother, or astringent.

    Decoctions - A decoction is used to same way as an infusion, but is more potent. Boil 1 ounce of the chopped, dried bark, chopped roots, and/or seeds of an herb in 1 pint of boiling water for at least 15 minutes and as long as 24 hours (bark, roots, and seeds require a longer boiling time to release their active constituents).

    Macerations - Like decoctions, macerations are concentrated, potent herbal preparations. Fill a sterilized jar with crushed herbs, dried or fresh, using 1 ounce of herb for every pint of liquid. Cover with vegetable oil, cider vinegar, and rubbing alcohol or grain alcohol such as vodka. Cover the jar and let the mixture stand for two weeks; shake the jar daily.

    Strain the liquid into a sterilized bottle, cap, and store in the refrigerator. Warm to room temperature before using. Oil macerations may be used as massage treatments; vinegars as toners, hair rinses, or in foot soaks; and alcohols, as toners, astringents, antiseptics, or cleansers. Macerations will keep in the refrigerator for as long as two months.

    Poultices - These draw out impurities from the pores. Place a handful of herbs in a cup and moisten them with water heated to about 200F. Allow them to cool enough so they won’t burn your skin, then wrap them in cheesecloth or muslin. Apply the poultice to the skin; remove it when cool.

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