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Thank you all for your replies here. I'm definitely going to try one of those products, just have to decide which one.
Vienna, thank you so much for bringing this site to my attention. Having been vegetarian for thiry years (God, I'm getting on a bit!), and the reasons for being so, ethical attitudes and operational execution, is extremely important to me, and this company seems to tick all the boxes.I don`t buy a commercially branded toner but i buy lavender hydrolat which is the condensed water left over after lavender flowers have had the lavender oil extracted. I use it as a toner, also on insect bites in the Summer and its also very calming if your skin becomes upset with a product or procedure. The hydrolat is chemical and additive free and I buy it in a litre bottle and decant it. It can be mixed with other floral waters such as orange blossom, geranium, rose etc but I prefer to just use it alone. It costs me just £10 for a litre which lasts me months and it makes my skin feel lovely. Here`s the link if you`re interested.
http://www.naturallythinking.com/categories/Aromatherapy/Floral-Water-{47}-Hydrolat/
Louise I have sensitive skin too and the slightest thing can set it off. I`ve had no trouble at all with the lavender hydrolat and the website do a range of plain and simple skincare, bodycare and hair care bases which have nothing added to them, no esentials oils in them and can be used just as they are. Here`s the link.Vienna, thank you so much for bringing this site to my attention. Having been vegetarian for thiry years (God, I'm getting on a bit!), and the reasons for being so, ethical attitudes and operational execution, is extremely important to me, and this company seems to tick all the boxes.
I have extremely sensitive skin; from your experience, would you say I ought to give this a try? Obviously, I will patch test first.
It seems that EH Moringa balm may help to balance your skin srhgts, but I may be wrong. Someone with similar concerns said it cleared dry patches on combination skin.I don't use the same one all the time, I've got quite a few in rotation because my skin's a bit mad due to hormonal imbalance (oily, very sensitive, acne prone, rosacea, recently eczema and related dryness and flakiness at the same time as the oil, wtf.) My skin seems to want different things depending what day it is so I swap between washes and more creamy cleansers and that. I like a few from Paula's Choice, the Body Shop aloe cream cleanser, Clinique take the day off cleansing balm, Cerave hydrating cleanser... The rest of my skincare stays the same but my skin complains if I use the same cleanser continually.
It seems that EH Moringa balm may help to balance your skin srhgts, but I may be wrong. Someone with similar concerns said it cleared dry patches on combination skin.
LADY TIA;738797 said:What I use regardless of what skincare I'm using is colloidal silver to keep my skin clear and calm, I've been doing this, mmmm must be for around a year now and its my staple product above everything else.
Sorry to be the voice of doom, but please be very careful with Colloidal silver LT. A friend of mine used it and developed Argyria, a result of long term use of Colloidal silver where your skin, nails, internal organs etc. turn a kind of ashen blue/grey. And it's permanent, doesn't revert back to normal when you stop using the silver. So now she has to deal with looking like a corpse all over as well as what she was using the silver for. She now takes antidepressants because she looks so weird, even with makeup. Even her gums are blue/gray so she doesn't want to smile. l gather from her that colloidal silver is not used medically in most countries since the advent of antibiotics, but caused Argyria in millions of people before that. Something to do with silver deposits getting into the blood and being held all through the body, basically silver poisoning. Is mainly only available nowadays from alternative health outlets. Please read up on it before using it long-term.
Hi, did your friend take it internally, I don't ingest just a spritz couple of times a day as my skin toner, the amount I use is nowhere near enough to cause the blue tinge, I have read up on it and you would have to consume a fair amount for the blue effect to take place but thanks for mentioning as I know its probably not something people are aware of. I feel for your friend it must be terrible for her and the fact that it can't be something that eases over time is very distressing.
Scout I don't use it but having read your post I can assure you I never will, so thanks for your post.You don't have to consume it to get argyria LT, external use can also cause what they call 'localised argyria' where just the skin area where it's being used turns blue/grey, or it affects the eyes if eye drops are being used etc. The silver salts are absorbed by the skin, eyes etc when applied topically, and when used regularly localised argyria of that area can result.
Scout I don't use it but having read your post I can assure you I never will, so thanks for your post.