This is not to say that any of the following ingredients that I have picked up on are
bad per se - just that they are known irritants and if you market your products at sensitive skins then the products should not contain so darn many of them! Grrr!
Lanolin is defintely a massively common irritant - although I s'pose it helps that many people who have reactions to it don't know that it was lanolin that caused the problem. People tend to blame the brand and not look at the ingredients.
diproplyene glycol The Cosmetics Database says "Type of Concern: Human irritant - strong evidence.
Product Conditions: products for use around the eyes, on the skin, or may be aerosolized (airborne)
Source: Cosmetic Ingredient Review Assessments"
benzyl bensoate scores a red for danger 8 out of 10 for toxicity at The Cosmetics Database. It says it is a "Known human immune system toxicant"
Phenoxyethanol Used as a fragrance ingredient as well as a preservative, this is in particularly wide use in natural skincare - and is approved (after long, hard consideration) by the Soil Association for use in organic cosmetics, as it was deemed less problematic than many, many other preservatives. However, it’s not entirely without question marks over it; it can be irritating to some people, and cause contact allergies. It is also synthetically derived - one of a handful of synthetics permitted in organic cosmetics. As other acceptable preservatives emerge, Phenoxyethanol may gradually be phased out by beauty manufacturers: watch this space. Green Beauty Bible
cocmidepropyl betaine "Known human immune system toxicant" National Library of Medicine HazMap
Cinnamal "Occurs naturally in cinnamon bark, cassia bark extract and root oils; it is one of the most common allergens, and must be listed as a separate fragrance component on labels because of this."
Green Beauty Bible
Linalool "A compound found in lavender oil which has to be listed on labels because it’s one of the most common allergens."
Green Beauty Bible
Limonene "Naturally occurring in star anise, caraway, celery, oranges, cumin, fennel, marigold and more, this compound has to be listed on labels because it is one of the most common allergens."
Green Beauty Bible
Ooh and all those PEGs in products for sensitive skin? Nooooo! They're not safe for use on damaged skin.
http://www.beautybible.com/green_pag...ents-index.htm
http://www.cosmeticsdatabase.com/
I hope I'm not breaking any rules by posting this here. I don't always understand why one thread gets moved and another doesn't - so apologies if I'm doing it wrong. (It wouldn't be the first time! I get lots of things wrong

)
Can I just say I'd rather you delete my post if it's in the wrong rather than have the whole thread moved out of the public domain. I hope I'm not overstepping my bounds by saying that.

:heart: