Recently I’ve posted about Five Gentle Bubbles my official hair Cleanser. It’s the only Cleanser I have and keep on formulating because ‘I’ don’t need to worry about applying it on my hair because it’s not causing any ‘toxicity’ on my cutis and hair. Also, it does not cause black patches on my cutis.
I am formulating the cleanser because I purely want to help the people around me, by providing them with a mild cleanser. Also, I am documenting the things that we do in making the cleanser because we want to only figure out our mistakes in creating the cleanser. It is our reference when we want to understand formulation issues. For people who’ve been reading my ‘posts’ for a long time, you ‘probably’ know by now that I like documenting things that happen to me, even though they are good, embarrassing, or fascinating. I hope you remember reading that in my ‘post’. Hence I am ‘now’ writing my mistakes in making the hair cleanser.
Also, my reason for analyzing and documenting the problems that we have while making the hair cleanser is that I want it to be improved so I can help the people around me, and my family. I want to prevent the stress that can be caused by repeated ‘usage’ of products that may contain toxic ingredients. I usually write about the effects of essential oils, but today I’ve written a formulation correction post, and I hope that you understand this.
In my previous post, I’ve written the complete procedure from the beginning to the bottling of the cleanser, but this does not mean that I am writing some details about those procedures again.
My focus in this post is to write the Correction I made on the hair cleanser. It is not yet perfect by the way, because I’m still in the process of improving it, but I hope it will be perfected.
In my hair Cleanser I have repeatedly preferred to have Naturally derived ingredients. The ingredients are:
- Coco Glucoside
- decyl glucoside
- Cocamidopropyl Betaine
- glycerine
- xantham gum
- aqua
The ingredients I used here are the ingredients I used in the other post. Previously, I dissolved xantham gum in glycerin then the zurfactant was poured on the dissolved xantham gum. This resulted in a thick texture because I over-stirred it to dissolve the xantham gum. Therefore I had to add more aqua to make the texture thinner.
To avoid repeating the same mistake, I did not follow the previous step. I dissolve the xantham gum in glycerin and then poured the mixture on the mixed surfactant. This has resulted in a thick texture because I over-stirred it to dissolve xantham gum.
Hence, I added aqua
- 90 grams aqua
- 101 grams aqua
- 104 grams aqua
The hair cleanser became aqueous hence, it has to be corrected.
I am hoping that ‘I’ will understand the correct way of making a hair cleanser because my Ingredients are genuinely mild and not harmful to the Cutis. As for you, I hope that you also think that it is important to understand the true nature of your hair Cleanser so you won’t need to worry that it will cause you ‘toxicity’ or hurt you. You can be assured that Cleansers that are made with Gentle ingredients are honestly good for your Cutis
Trust naturally good Ingredients ❤