Can You Afford Organic Skin Care? Why Organic Beauty Costs So Much
You are already used to paying a little more for organic food. You know that it’s more nutritious and isn’t exposed to any mystery pesticides or hormones we don’t want in our bodies. You may have also heard that 60% of what you put on your skin is absorbed into the bloodstream. Some of us may just like the IDEA of a rosemary oil running through our veins better than the idea of a toxic paraben and for some of us it just seems like they are constantly finding new links between these commonly used chemicals and cancer, alzheimers, autism, birth defects & other illnesses and want to just avoid them all together. Whatever your reason for going “green”, you have probably noticed that in general, organic skin care doesn’t cost a little more than conventional, it costs a lot more.
Do you get what you pay for?
I did learn a bit about cosmetic chemistry in cosmetology school but it wasn’t until I started making my own body lotion that I truly understood what a delicate balancing act it is. It all started when a favorite lotion of mine was discontinued. I looked up the ingredients and started to wonder if I could recreate it myself using organic ingredients with the same properties as the ingredients in the original formula. Well, over the course of a few months experimentation I finally ended up with a pretty good formula. Friends suggested I sell it. The only problem - it cost me about $30 a bottle in raw materials to make. That wasn’t including my time or equipment. Surely a skin care manufacturer could get some of those costs down but ultimately the retail price for an 8oz. bottle of lotion like the rich, organic, skin nurturing formula I made, would be at least $40. In comparison, an 18 oz bottle of St. Ives body lotion is around $5.00.
Some of the cost has to do with demand. We’ve seen the price of organic produce come way down over the last couple years and with our growing interest in organic personal care, an organic skin care or cosmetics company is born everyday. Over time, this will drive raw material prices down. But a lot of it has to do with the scarcity and quality of the delicate natural ingredients. It takes hundreds of pounds of roses, evening primrose, or borage seed to make one ounce of deeply skin hydrating oil. St. Ives and thousands of other brands use cheap, hormone disrupting preservatives and skin clogging mineral oil, petrolatum and silicone; ingredients that ultimately leave your skin even worse off. As a buyer, I want to be able to offer something for every budget, especially for those of you just starting out, taking steps in a more natural direction. Prices shouldn’t be prohibitive but quality and beauty should not be lacking either. I buy for a store that specifically represents luxury lines which means highest quality ingredients with less fillers that work better, faster and longer than anything else. With that in mind, a $5.00 body lotion just isn’t possible.
Wait! The good news is, in my experience, ounce for ounce, organic products outlast conventional ones. You may actually go through a 16 oz. bottle of St Ives in the same amount of time you would go through an 8 oz. bottle of Jurlique lotion. You would notice you were used to slathering stuff on that is formulated to evaporate and coat the skin when you first use something that was formulated to truly heal and hydrate the skin. The same goes for a soap, lip balm, eye cream, you name it. Organic counterparts are more likely to contain more effective ingredients, be easier to apply, are less likely to cause skin dependency, are less likely to exaporate, and you will notice that creams and lotions especially are lower volume because they are not pumped up with fillers that do nothing for your skin. I can moisturize my entire 5′10″ body with about a pump and a half of Jurlique body lotion whereas it takes me about 5 pumps of a conventional brand and I don’t have to worry about how much of the stuff-I-can’t-pronounce is getting into my bloodstream. So remember, sometimes organic costs more cash but the real cost of cheaper conventional products may be hidden.
Comments
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.