Why Are There So Many Ingredients in a Commerci...

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Why Are There So Many Ingredients in a Commercial Brand?

I get asked this quite a lot and sometimes I don't get asked why but I do meet with prospective brand owners who have decided that their philosophy is simplicity with what few ingredients they do want having to be pure, natural and recognisable (i.e.: nothing that sounds like a chemical).Commercial brands often seem like a chemical soup with ingredient lists stretching into 15 or maybe 20 ingredients and making the same but different - with only say 5 natural lovely things is ultra appealing.


I totally understand that mindset but also know this can lead to a case of death by oversimplification where instead of a safe, natural concoction you end up with either microbe soup or a physical wreck.

Here are eight ingredient categories that your newbie or stripped-back beauty product maker often overlooks:

Chelating Agents:

Chelating agents help a preservative system to work by mopping up any trace impurities (and there will be some, even in organic oils, clays and extracts) that are floating around in your formula. These impurities, left to their own devices will feed that little micro army and could have your product overwhelmed and unsafe in no time. There are synthetic chelators such as EDTA and more natural chelating agents. I like Sodium Phytate although it is very expensive in comparison and not quite as effective most of the time.

Viscosity Modifiers in Emulsions (creams):

This group of ingredients helps change the thickness (viscosity) of the product - pretty obvious hey? But they also do more than that, they can help to stabilise your water phase and make the whole product more robust - less likely to fall apart on storage. They also affect the flow or rheology of your product and that impacts on how it comes out of your packaging, how easy or hard it is to rub in, how far and fast it spreads on the skin and even how light or heavy the product feels. Finally your thickener may or may not have a yield value- strength to hold particles. This yield value determines whether it can hold up those micro beads and scrub agents you placed into your shower gel or exfoliating cream.

Simple, common examples of viscosity modifiers would be Xanthan Gum (natural, gel like viscosity, relatively low yield value), Acacia and Xanthan Gum (easier to handle, slightly thinner maximum viscosity) Hydroxyethyl Cellulose (builds up very high viscosity without gelling) and Carbomer (synthetic, smooth flow and varying yield values but can be very high).

Rheology Modifiers :

Yes these can also thicken your formula (just as viscosity modifiers can influence how a product flows) but we primarily use rheology modifiers because of their flow characteristics rather than because of how thick they can make a product.Because flow and thickness can be very important in a cosmetic it is not unusual to find formulations containing two or even three viscosity/ rheology modifying ingredients to achieve the perfect flow, thickness and performance. Examples of rheology modifiers are: Modified guar gums such as Guar Hydroxypropyl Trimonium Chloride (which may not really thicken much at all) to the clay based thickeners such as Aluminum Magnesium Silicate which can build reasonably high viscosities especially when paired with xanthan gum.

Oil Phase Structure Building Ingredient.

Thickening and structuring the oil phase of an emulsion or the only phase of a balm - lip or otherwise is another rarely thought up thing for newbies but believe me, it can mean a whole lot of difference when your lovely oil rich product is destined to be used in a hot climate – 30C° plus. While natural waxes do make a product thick they don't always give it structure, which is, why when many simple, natural products melt they sort of fall apart rather than gently softening to a more liquid state. Structure agents for oils come in various forms with the most common being hydrogenated vegetable oils such as our Oil Thickener, which is a natural option.

Secondary Emulsifiers :

The self-emulsifying wax blend has made making a cream easy but it doesn't mean that all of those creams will be commercially viable, elegant or stable. In the commercial world we often use combinations of emulsifiers to find the sweet spot between a stable emulsion and a great performing product. Combinations can lower the overall price and give a variety of novel textures and rub-in characteristics. They can even help improve active delivery and SPF performance (if that matters). A good secondary emulsifier is often quite a small molecule, it may even be charged to give you a second way of holding the oil and water together. Some examples here are Glyceryl Stearate and Potassium Stearate, Sodium Stearate and Sodium Stearoyl Glutamate all of which are naturally derived.

A Preservative :

Nobody wants to use micro-killing ingredients in their products as preservatives in food are associated with mass manufactured, artificially long shelf life products but sadly in cosmetics preservation is a must.It can take less than three days in a warm climate for a cream to become infested with microbes if un-preserved and if you think keeping it in the fridge will solve the problem it won't.

While there are a couple of products that can get away without one most of the time - bath salts, sugar scrubs, some balms - cosmetics are a microbe banquet and it is the preservative that keeps them safe. For the 'I only want to use ingredients that are natural and sound healthy' crew we have the option of a rose derived Phenethyl Alcohol or an Almond derived Naticide® both of which have given pleasing results in PET.

More Than One Preservative.

Small brands hardly even use more than one preservative or pre-made blend and that is usually because these brands don't have the budget to do the testing to find an optimal solution.It is rare for a big cosmetics house to use just one preservative or blend across all products because different products have different micro risks attached, different pH, manufacturing conditions and packaging considerations.

Fillers :

This one applies to the mineral make-up makers who crave simplicity. Often the so-called fillers in a mineral make up are what give it the amazing glide, long-wear characteristics, soft-focus effect, oil absorbing properties or coverage. There are a huge amount of 'fillers' or additives that can be put into mineral make up derived from natural and synthetic sources but some common ones are: Magnesium Sulfate, Tapioca Starch or Kaolin. Rather than seeing these as unnecessary fillers they are integral to the formula and help ensure it does the job!

There is so much more to cosmetic product development than I can say here. If you are interested please check out my Cosmetic Chemistry course details on the New Directions website or contact me for more information as rather than just make the whole thing more complex and confusing learning how these things REALLY work will open up a whole new world of creative possibility.

If you wish to know more why not join me at my next Cosmetic Chemistry Course.

Amanda Foxon-Hill

17 July 2014

More about: Business Tips, Cosmetics

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