An Interview On Natural Skin Care Product
With this interview you get a lot of information on what you should look for in a natural skin care product. And also what you should look out for. Paul Lieber has been into natural skin care for 20 years and his best advice read the label. And the best part he says what to look for.
Natural Skin Care - Excerpts from an Interview with Cosmetic
Chemist, Paul Lieber
By Christine Farlow
Paul Lieber is a cosmetic chemist with Royal Labs in Johns
Island, South Carolina. Paul's experience and expertise in the
natural skin care product arena qualify him to discuss what
really makes a skin care product natural and how to choose truly
natural and healthy skin care products.
I've had the pleasure of chatting with Paul frequently - on the
phone - and getting to know him since January 2006. I've been
impressed with Paul's knowledge about truly natural skin care
products and his dedication to creating and producing top
quality skin care products that are not only pure and healthy
for you, but that also have the nice look, smell and feel of the
expensive department store brands, but without the harmful
chemicals.
Here are some excerpts from the interviews I've done with Paul:
DrF: Paul, can you tell me what your motivation was for becoming
a cosmetic chemist?
PL: I grew up in the natural foods industry and I was always
interested in being able to make products that were natural.
That was probably the most important thing to me. Also I was
always interested in my own skin, my own wellbeing. And it was
just something I gravitated to.
DrF: How did you get started developing your own natural herbal
skin care products?
PL: I couldn't find any products in the marketplace that I felt
were really natural products. I felt that most of the products
out there calling themselves natural were very, similar to, or
were the same as, you can buy in the mass market and these were
far from natural. And since there was nothing out there that was
usable in my eyes, I went into R&D and tried to come up with
products that I felt were worthy of being called natural as well
as being functional products. My fanatical belief in product
purity led me down the path to developing our own products.
DrF: What problems did you have to overcome in creating your
natural products?
PL: Well it was very difficult to formulate products that would
look, feel and smell like a traditional cosmetic product, but
without the chemicals and it was very difficult to find raw
materials that would fit the bill. Creams needed to feel silky
smooth. They needed to be a beautiful color in the jar, a white
color. They needed to deliver active materials to the skin.
Usually with a chemical product there is a very wide range of
raw materials you can choose in formulating but from a natural
standpoint the palate for raw materials is much smaller. In most
cases it's almost impossible to duplicate a chemical product. So
it's been very challenging for 20 years trying to come up with
alternatives, but I think we've done a great job and we have
products that act, look, smell, feel no different than any other
department store product but without all the chemicals.
DrF: Can you tell me some of the ingredients that are used in
many of these so-called natural products that you think should
not be in cosmetics or skin care products?
PL: Well, the preservatives, methyl parabens, propyl parabens,
phenoxyethanol, also triethanolamine, carbomer, mineral oil,
petrolatum, paraffin, propylene glycol, strong surfactants like
sodium lauryl sulfate. There are a host of other ones also,
different emulsifiers and different esters of ingredients. These
are ingredients that act like moisturizers but are not from
natural sources.
Recently, I received a jar of a cream from someone wanting to
duplicate a very famous cream that's on the marketplace now and
sells for a few hundred dollars per jar. After looking at the
ingredients in this product, I was astounded that it was
primarily made of 100% chemical ingredients. It had a variety of
silicones and petroleum products in it which can't be considered
natural. And they talk about it as a natural product.
Unfortunately that's just the way things work.
DrF: In Dying To Look Good some of the herbs and essential oils
I list have contraindications for certain people, such as if
they're pregnant, have kidney problems or high blood pressure.
When those types of ingredients are used in skin care products
do those same warnings or contraindications still apply?
PL: No. Most are used in such small percentages in the
formulations that their usage has no negative side affects at
all. In my 20 years in business, I've never seen anyone with an
adverse reaction to any herbal product used in this way.
For example, a long time ago, a woman told me that she could not
use our toner because it had aloe vera in it and she was
allergic to aloe vera. I told her it was unlikely that she was
allergic to the aloe but she was probably allergic to the other
chemicals in the products. She claimed she was using a 100% aloe
vera gel. So, I sent her pure aloe vera powder and told her to
add a little water and put it on her face. She did and of course
she called me back and said, "Oh my God, I'm not allergic to
aloe vera at all." It was all the other "stuff" in the formula
that was causing her problems.
DrF: I've heard that "plant extracts, herbs and other plants,
can have parabens and propylene glycol in them already when
they're received by the manufacturer and the manufacturer
doesn't have to put this information on the label. The only way
they're free of parabens or other synthetic preservatives is if
they're extracted in vegetable glycerin." What is your
perspective on that?
PL: That's true. That's why I do not use the herbal tinctures in
the form many companies do. When you buy herbal tinctures, you
don't know where the herbs come from, their quality or if they
contain additives. I just buy the raw herb itself. I buy organic
and make my own concoction and put that into my product. I know
what I'm putting into my product. Most companies don't go to
that length. It's easier to just buy the extract or tincture. So
in many cases you may be getting a product with synthetic
preservatives or other chemicals in it. I've circumvented that
whole issue by making my own.
DrF: Some people in the natural product arena use cocomidopropyl
betaine and some speak against it. I know you mentioned once
before that you use it. What can you tell me about
cocomidopropyl betaine?
PL: It's a coconut derived surfactant, a foaming agent. I don't
know how much more natural you can get than cocomidopropyl
betaine.
DrF: Are there variations of it? Can it be derived from
something other than coconut in a laboratory?
PL: No, coco betaine is from coconut. Coco betaine has a long
track record. It works, it's effective, it foams.
DrF: What about potassium sorbate? I know you use it as a
preservative.
PL: It comes from sorbic acid, from fruit trees. It's a natural
source mold inhibitor. Sorbic acid is a natural raw material and
potassium sorbate is its derivative.
DrF: Olefin sulfonate is an ingredient I've seen in some of your
products, but I haven't checked it out yet. What can you tell me
about it? PL: It's a surfactant from coconut. It's a very mild
foaming agent. We use it because it has great properties. It's
effective and safe. It has a long track record of being used
from I think in the 40's and 50's. In fact it was the surfactant
of choice used years ago, primarily in baby products. Only when
sodium lauryl sulfate came on the scene and was cheaper and
easier to use did it fall out of favor.
We've found olefin sulfonate to be very effective. There are
only a few choices and you have to weigh the issues. I don't
believe in using soap since soap is very caustic and drying to
the skin and hair. At this point, you have to move into
surfactants. Olefin sulfonate is very mild and can be used in a
variety of applications. We're trying to find a happy medium.
I've tried to choose surfactants that are mild and without
harmful side effects. Coco betaine is one, soy betaine, olefin
sulfonate and decyl glucoside are others, but decyl glucoside is
not one that can be used in a lot of different applications. My
choice of some of these ingredients is because I feel that
they're natural and from an efficacious standpoint, they work.
DrF: What kind of things should people look for when choosing
skin care products to get the safest products that they can?
PL: I think just what we touched on before. Looking for products
that don't have chemical preservatives, mineral oils,
fragrances, artificial colors, alcohol, these types of
ingredients.
DrF: If you were going to give some advice about the most
important thing that anyone could do when choosing their
cosmetics and skin care products, what would you tell them?
PL: Read the ingredients. That would be the most important
thing. Become a label reader and understand what you're buying;
understand what the ingredients are in the product and educate
yourself on what you're using before you use it.
DrF: Thank you, Paul, that's really good advice. It was really
great talking with you.
PL: Thank you very much it was my pleasure.
About the author:
© 2006 Christine H. Farlow, D.C., "The Ingredients Investigator"
and author of DYING TO
LOOK GOOD. Read more excerpts from Paul Lieber and learn
about his natural skin care products, click
here.
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