Dec 3, 2014

How well do you know your beauty cream?

Understanding what we put on our face is key to healthy skin.


Brenese™ Ageless Rejuvenating Cream
L'Oreal - Youth Code Day/Night Cream
CliniqueYouth Surge Night Age Decelerating Night Moisturizer–Combination Oily to Oily
Ingredients
Ingredients
Ingredients
1. Shea butter,
2. Cocoa butter,
3. Jojoba oil,
4. Aqua,
5. White Petroleum,
6. Zinc Oxide,
7. Epsom Salts,
8. Glycerin
  1. AQUA
  2. GLYCERIN 
  3. ISOHEXADECANE 
  4. CYCLOHEXASILOXANE 
  5. DIMETHICONE 
  6. ALCOHOL DENAT
  7. DIPROPYLENE GLYCOL 
  8. SYNTHETIC WAX
  9. ADENOSINE
  10. ASCORBYL GLUCOSIDE
  11. BIFIDA FERMENT
  12. LYSATE 
  13. CAFFEINE 
  14. CAPRYLIC/CAPRIC TRIGLYCERIDE
  15. DIMETHICONE/PEG-10/15 CROSSPOLYMER 
  16. DIMETHICONE/POLYGLYCERIN-3 CROSSPOLYMER 
  17. DISODIUM EDTA 
  18. DISTEARDIMONIUM HECTORITE
  19. ETHYLHEXYLGLYCERIN
  20. HYDROXYETHYLPIPERAZINE ETHANE SULFONIC ACID
  21. LIMONENE
  22.  METHYLPARABEN 
  23. NYLON-12 
  24. PEG-10 DIMETHICONE 
  25. PHENOXYETHANOL 
  26. POLYSILICONE-8
  27. PROPYLENE CARBONATE 
  28. SODIUM ACRYLATES COPOLYMER 
  29. SODIUM HYDROXIDE
  30. TOCOPHERYL ACETATE 
  31. SODIUM BENZOATE 
  32. PARFUM
  1. Water,
  2. Methyl Trimethicone,
  3. Alcohol Denat,
  4. Silica,
  5. Polyethylene,
  6. Glycerin,
  7. Dimethicone,
  8. Butylene Glycol,
  9. PEG-10 Dimethicone,
  10. Sodium Chloride,
  11. Dipropylene Glycol,
  12. Sigesbeckia Orientalis (St. Paul's Wort) Extract,
  13. Hordeum Vulgare (Barley) Extract, Triticum Vulgare (Wheat) Germ Extract,
  14. nonotus Obliquus (Mushroom) Extract,
  15. Rosmarinus Officinalis (Rosemary) Leaf Extract,
  16. Centella Asiatica (Hydrocotyl) Extract,
  17. Padina Pavonica Thallus Extract,
  18. Astrocaryum Murumuru Seed Butter,
  19.  Polygonum Cuspidatum Root Extract,
  20. Camellia Sinensis (White Tea) Leaf Extract,
  21. Laurdimonium Hydroxypropyl Hydrolyzed Soy Protein,
  22. Aspalathus Linearis (Red Tea) Leaf Extract,
  23. Camellia Sinensis (Yellow Tea) Leaf Extract,
  24. Scutellaria Baicalensis Root Extract,
  25. Morus Bombycis (Mulberry) Root Extract,
  26. Caprylyl Methicone,
  27. Glycine Soja (Soybean) Protein,
  28.  Coffea Robusta Seed Extract,
  29. Hydrolyzed Rice Extract,
  30.  Saccharomyces Lysate Extract,
  31. Caffeine,
  32. Creatine,
  33. Acetyl Hexapeptide-8,
  34. PEG-150,
  35. Algae Extract,
  36. Betula Alba (Birch) Bark Extract,
  37.  Coleus Barbatus Extract,
  38. Lauryl PEG-9 Polydimethylsiloxyethyl Dimethicone,
  39. Jojoba Esters,
  40. Sorbitol,
  41. Betaine,
  42. Trehalose,
  43. Sucrose,
  44. Sodium RNA,
  45. Linoleic Acid, Squalane,
  46. Cholesterol,
  47. Arginine,
  48. Tocopheryl Acetate,
  49. Dipalmitoyl Hydroxyproline,
  50. Tetrahexyldecyl Ascorbate,
  51. Yeast Extract,
  52. Ethylhexyl Palmitate,
  53. Lecithin,
  54. Artemia Extract,
  55. Sodium Hyaluronate,
  56. Isoniacinamide,
  57. Disodium NADH,
  58. Adenosine Phosphate,
  59. Hydrogenated Lecithin,
  60.  Decarboxy Carnosine HCL,
  61.  Potassium Sulfate,
  62. Glycine,
  63. Sodium DNA,
  64. Disteardimonium Hectorite,
  65.  Hydroxyproline,
  66. Proline,
  67. Micrococcus Lysate,
  68. Xanthan Gum,
  69. Acrylates Copolymer,
  70. Ascorbyl Tocopheryl Maleate,
  71. Ethylhexyl Stearate,
  72. Phytosphingosine,
  73. Caprylyl Glycol,
  74. Carbomer,
  75. Propylene Glycol Dicaprate,
  76.  Nordihydroguaiaretic Acid,
  77.  Disodium EDTA,
  78. Potassium Sorbate,
  79. Phenoxyethanol
Agnes Mwangi
 

Nov 11, 2014

Exfoliating is not all about scrubbing.



Cold weather is here and with that comes dry itchy skin.
It can be painful and frustrating.

I used to scrub my face to exfoliate. With that other problems started showing up. All winter I would have dry scaly skin on my forehead, chin and cheeks. The best I could do during the day was cover up with a heavy dose of foundation. Then had to scrub the foundation off in evening and then put on a heavy dose of face cream.

Where does it stop?

What to do?

Shaving! Yes shaving on my face.
Every time I shave my legs, they are nice and smooth for days.
So why can’t I shave the dead skin off my face instead of scrubbing?

Have you ever noticed how young men look after a shave?
That is because as they shave their beard they also shave off the dead skin.

And for some light acne cases already in process, shaving can help get rid of whiteheads and blackheads from the face. Do not shave areas that are sore or infected. Use a shaving cream for sensitive skin.

Armed with a razor and my mild face soap I go to work.

  • Wet my face.
  • Make rather in my hands.
  • Rub the lather all over my face.
  • Start shaving.
  • Just like men do, except it is all over my face. Not too close to the hairline. Watch out for the eyebrows.
  • Rinse off the soap.
  • Pat face dry and apply your face cream.
                                   Brenese™ Ageless Rejuvenating Cream
I repeat this every other week. The rest of the times I wash my face with a gentle washcloth.

Shave with a sharp blade. Use gentle swipes instead of heavy pressure and go with the flow or "grain." A single-edged blade is better than a twin-blade razor. Electric razors may not shave as close to the skin, but they help with the prevention of acne and other skin breakouts and flare-ups better.

Agnes Mwangi
Brenese™ Care Products

 

Nov 5, 2014

Brenese Skin Cream! Skin cream made for babies and you!

The only body cream for your baby, child and your skin. 5 (Five) ingredients!


Brenese™ Skin Cream
JOHNSON'S® Baby Lotion
AVEENO® Baby Soothing Relief Moisture Cream
          Ingredients
    Ingredients
           Ingredients
  1. Shea butter,
  2. Jojoba oil,
  3. White Petrolatum,
  4. Glycerin and
  5. Zinc oxide
1.  Water,
2.  Isopropyl Palmitate,
3.  Glycerin,
4.  Stearic Acid,
6.  Glyceryl Stearate,
7.  Cetyl Alcohol,
8.  Cetearyl Alcohol,
9.  Dimethicone,
11. Mineral Oil,
12. Phenoxyethanol,
13. Polysorbate 20,
14. Magnesium Aluminum
15. Silicate, Fragrance,
16. Carbomer,
17. p-Anisic Acid,
19. Sodium Hydroxide,
20. Xanthan Gum,
21. Ethylhexylglycerin,
22. Pentaerythrityl Tetra-di-t-  butyl Hydroxyhydrocinnamate,
24 Red 33
  1. Avena Sativa (Oat)
  2.  Kernel Extract ,
  3. Beeswax (Apis Mellifera) ,
  4. Benzoic Acid ,
  5. Dimethicone ,
  6. Epilobium Angustifolium (Canadian Willowherb) Extract,
  7. Glycerin ,
  8. Methylparaben ,
  9.  Microcrystalline Wax ,
  10. Mineral Oil (Paraffinum Liquidum)
  11. Oenothera Biennis (Evening Primrose) Seed Extract ,
  12. Potassium Hydroxide , Propylparaben ,
  13. Sorbitan Sesquioleate
  14. Synthetic Beeswax ,
  15. Water






















Agnes Mwangi

www.bcpcreams.com

Oct 21, 2014

Zinc Oxide (ZnO)


Zinc oxide is the metal zinc that has been oxidized. The chemical formula is ZnO, 1 zinc atom and 1 oxygen atom held together by an ionic bond.

This mineral is not soluble in water, but it does dissolve in acidic environments. It is known best in the United States as a primary ingredient in sunscreen lotions.

How does zinc oxide work?

Zinc oxide is one of the safest ingredients for protecting the skin from the harmful effects of ultraviolet (UV) rays. UV rays penetrate the skin and damage tissue, speeding up the aging process and drying the skin out. These rays also increase the risk of skin cancer. Sunscreens containing zinc oxide filter out UV rays, keeping them from penetrating the skin and causing cell damage. 
 
  1. Zinc oxide sits on the outer, dead, layer of skin, and any free radicals generated will not affect living cells below
  2. Our active ingredients Jojoba Oil and Shea Butter provide powerful antioxidants, which help scavenge, or absorb, free radicals

Zinc oxide is also effective for healing the skin. It can be used to heal wounds, reduce the tenderness associated with sunburns and soften chapped skin. People who are zinc deficient typically experience slower wound-healing times. When zinc oxide is applied to the wound area, it provides the body with the extra zinc it needs to repair skin cells. Zinc oxide helps keep the wound area moist and clean.


 


Oct 15, 2014

The truth about petrolatum

Petrolatum cuts a wide swath in skin care. Why are many companies choosing not to use it?

By Diane Peters

The truth about petrolatum


When my two toddlers had itchy rashes on their chests, my doctor diagnosed eczema. The cure: no more bubble baths, and plenty of thick, perfume-free moisturizer. “The best thing you can use is good old Vaseline,” she said.
Doctors like mine have been recommending petroleum jelly (also called petrolatum) for more than 100 years. In the 1850s, chemist Robert Chesebrough started the process of distilling and cleaning the thick gel found on oil wells. By 1870, Vaseline was being sold in the United States.


In industry, petrolatum acts as a lubricant for machinery. Today, we also use it to relieve diaper rash, heal raw noses and soothe chapped lips. (Some people also use it as a sexual lubricant, but it weakens latex condoms.) It’s also an ingredi­ent in a variety of moisturizing products. The Environmental Working Group (EWG), a U.S. non-profit organization that does environmental and safety studies, says there’s petrolatum in one out of every 14 cosmetic products on the market, including 15 percent of lipsticks and 40 percent of baby lotions and oils. Plus, it’s used as an active ingredi­ent for healing cuts and burns.


So why are a host of new cosmetic products—many of them organic or natural—promoting themselves as “petrolatum free”?

Is petrolatum safe?

Health Canada considers petrolatum non-toxic. As for the Canadian Cosmetic, Toiletry and Fragrance Association (CCTFA), a trade organization that consults with the government on ingredients, its stand is that “it’s pretty much as universally safe as any substance could possibly be,” says spokesperson Mike Patton. However, the EWG gives it a “moderate hazard” safety rating, and says cosmetics that use petrolatum need more study for safety.


Why? The EWG says—and governments and the CCTFA acknowledge—there is a risk of contamination from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), cancer-causing chemicals found in crude oil and its by-products. While no studies have ever shown a direct link between petrolatum and cancer, the European Union put numerous grades of petrolatum on a list of dangerous substances. Only highly refined petrolatum can be used in cosmetics there.


Petrolatum used in cosmetic and personal care products sold in Canada is also a highly refined grade and must meet all of the standards set by the United States Pharmacopeia (USP), including limits for PAHs. Petrolatum used as an active ingredient in over-the-counter drugs goes through even stricter regulatory control.


Is there a chance toxins could be missed during processing and testing? Companies that produce petrolatum products say no. “Our personal care products are tested and meet all of the safety and regulatory requirements as set by Health Canada,” says Paul Hughes, technical manager for Unilever Canada, maker of Vaseline. “Some people are creating fear among consumers by telling only part of the story.”

Does it heal skin?

While some beauty companies are promoting petrolatum alternatives, other manufacturers swear by its ability to moisturize and heal. Petrolatum seals off the skin from water and air, and “it allows the skin to heal itself,” says Calgary pharmacist Skip Gibson. He’s vice-president of sales and marketing for George’s Special Dry Skin Cream, a petroleum jelly–based cream that he helped create.


“Petroleum jelly is the most effective moisturizer available,” says Vancouver dermatologist Dr. Richard Thomas. “The reduction in water loss makes it easier for the epidermis to continue normal function.”


But there’s a potential downside. A study that was published in Pediatrics in 2000 found that extremely-low-birth-weight infants treated with petroleum jelly were more likely to develop systemic candidiasis; it created a warm, moist place for fungi to grow. “Sometimes you want the skin to breathe more,” says Celeste Lutrario,vice-president of research and development for Burt’s Bees, which does not use petrolatum in its products. She says petrolatum is an occlusive barrier, locking in moisture—but it does not allow moisture to be absorbed from the atmos­phere. For example, lip balms with petrolatum and other petrochemicals can be less moisturizing than those with emollients that enable moisture exchange, contends Lutrario.

Is there an environmental impact?

Petrolatum comes from crude oil, and as such is not a renewable resource. Of course, the volume of the ingredients in one jar of petroleum jelly or a bottle of body moisturizer doesn’t come close to that used to fuel cars or run fac­tories. Still, Health Canada is currently investigating the environmental impact of petrolatum in cosmetics.


Concern for our planet and its resources is another reason why some companies are using oils from coconuts, sunflowers and olives in the formulation of their products. But these oils have an environmental footprint, too: They come from farmland, potentially displacing food crops.


Alternatives to petrolatum in cosmetics are more expensive and trickier to formulate. Right now, petrolatum is cheap, plentiful and generally safe, and it mixes up easily in the lab to create the products we use every day—it’s not going anywhere soon.


This article was originally titled "The truth about petrolatum," in the October 2009 issue of Best Health.

Best Health Magazine, October 2009

May 16, 2014

Where it all started

 
 
 
 
Where should I start?
 
Three boys, a husband who travels for business all the time (about 50%) and working on having my start up business grow.
 
Yep a start up business.
 
How the business came to be was more of an epiphany
 
Back in 2005 my oldest son was 1yr old. He had this rash on the back of his knees and inside of his elbows. I was on a mission to find a cream that would clear the rash. Of course it would go away for some time and then come back after the skin got used to the new baby cream or lotion. Yeah and the doctor also prescribed the steroids creams.
 
Fast-forward 3 yrs and 2 more kids. In 2008 the rash was still there.
 
Aaaaahhhhhh.
 
Then my little one at about 6 months started having the same rash. Was worse too.
 
I had to act fast.
 
On a mission to find anything that will work. Nothing. Urgh!!! they just took my money.
So what does a desperate mom do?
 
Aha!!
 
Make my own stuff. Seriously this is not me.
 
Took all the baby creams and lotions I had. Wrote down all the ingredients, and then researched all of them (will share them in futureJ).  Mom on a mission!
I cannot believe how ignorant and uneducated about what I was putting on my kids skin.
 
(Sigh)
 
Next step.
 
Started reading about the ingredients the “high end” products were telling us were good for us. You know shea butter, cacao butter, jojoba oil, Zinc Oxide for sun protection and a few others.
 
Yeah this can be done.  
 
Buy the stuff I needed and try to make something to get rid of the rash.
 
Hmmm
 
This mom made magic happen in the kitchen.
I was a cook on a mission. Melting, mixing and swirling.
 
Never ending.
 
Then something. Used on the boys. The rash just seemed to disappear.
 
I was on to something.
 
Gave it to friends (testers). They loved it. That was crazy wanting to test an unknown product. But I guess if I was using it on my kids it was okay. 
 
But it was not market ready.
 
Now the long road to the market begins.
 
 
Agnes Mwangi