Cosmetics & Toiletries

Application/Category Sponsored by

Email This Item!
Increase Text Size

Formulating With Naturals—Hair Conditioning

By: Art Georgalas, Georgalas Endeavors
Posted: December 4, 2012, from the December 2012 issue of Cosmetics & Toiletries.

Excerpt only Purchase This Article

5 pages available as a PDF download or printed copies mailed to you

Article Keywords:

What does it mean to condition hair naturally, if not simply to deliver conventional conditioning benefits with materials that fit some scheme of acceptable natural ingredients? To summarize the performance expected from hair conditioners as outlined in an earlier “Formulating With Naturals” column on natural hair care,1 an adequate product would reduce the force of both wet and dry combing, prevent snags, reduce the final surface charge to reduce fly-away with an antistatic effect, make hair mass more manageable and allow the consumer to style hair with ease. Other parameters cited could include wet and dry feel, gloss or shine, strengthening, and even color and UV radiation protection.2

This column proposes that the current natural and organic hair conditioner market can de divided into two types—those that are effective but use technology considered suspect under most natural certifications, i.e., “greenwashed,” and those that are more compliant with natural and organic certification but are found by consumers to have performance gaps. Both the development of new ingredients, mostly those naturally derived based on acceptable chemistries, and formulation techniques can potentially move the cosmetic industry into better performing conditioners within generally accepted natural guidelines.

This is only an excerpt of the full article that appeared in Cosmetics & Toiletries, but you can purchase the full-text version.