What is Lipstick Made of Ingredients and Facts

 Why Our Natural Lipstick are Best




A common myth about natural lipstick is that you need to sacrifice color payoff, vibrancy, or staying power for safer ingredients. WRONG: the proof is in the pigments. Sure, anyone can add shea butter or vitamin E to lipstick. But the pigments are where most brands lose any chance for a ‘natural’ lipstick formula.

Since the beginning, Susie Wang has formulated our lipsticks with the ultimate trifecta of natural ingredients. She nailed natural pigments, natural moisturizers, and natural long-lasting color — all without sacrificing a truly natural formula.

A History of Lipstick

It wasn’t until the 19th century that French cosmetologists began molding lipsticks for widespread, commercial sale. It was covered in silk paper and made from deer tallow or animal fat, castor oil, and the ever-useful, beeswax. During the same century, lipstick emerged in the U.S., and it was colored with carmine dye — a colored extract that comes from the dried and crushed shells of female cochineal insects. More of that soon!

Formulations of Lipstick

Through the years, what is lipstick made of ever thought it has evolved from crushed plant powder to a chemically formulated cosmetic. Even with new cosmetic innovations, there have been little to no regulations by the FDA on what can be used to make lipstick. This means that synthetic, toxic, and animal-derived ingredients have been freely tracing women’s lips for the last century.

Lipsticks contain a noxious mixture of petroleum-based chemicals, one of the worse contaminants being lead, many of which have not been tested for safety. Since lips are sensitive and easily absorb products through the thin layer of skin that covers them, these harsh chemicals are being ingested every time you lick your lips.

So What Is Lipstick Made Of?

Ever wonder what leaves the oily residue on your lips after using your favorite lipstick? That oily residue could be from tallow, or rendered animal fat from the carcasses of dead animals.

Tallow is a great option for cosmetic formulators who are trying to save a few bucks. Slaughterhouses sell the excess byproducts of their carcasses to cosmetics companies, for a low price that suits their bottom line.

Read Our Complete Blog at-https://www.100percentpure.com/blogs/feed/what-s-in-your-lipstick

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