Pretty N Pink. With notes of orange, grapefruit, dried rose petals, jasmine, sandalwood, and musk, you’ll love this bright and citrusy twist on a traditional rose fragrance. Oat milk, goats milk, shea and cocoa butters added for extra pampering and moisture retention.
Rose Quartz Oatmeal & Goats Milk Soap
Olive Oil (Olea Europaea), Coconut Oil (Cocos Nucifera), Castor Oil (Ricinus Communis), Shea Butter (Vitellaria Paradoxa), Cocoa Butter (Theobroma Cacao), Sweet Almond Oil (Prunus Dulcis), Oatmeal, Goats Milk, Tussah Silk, Kaolin Clay, Organic Himalayan Pink Salt, Organic Cane Sugar, Rose Clay, Titanium Dioxide, Spearmint Leaves, Skin Safe Micas, Fragrance Oil.
Cocoa butter might bring to mind decadent desserts like chocolate bars, fudge layer cake, and chocolate chip ice cream. Yet this tasty ingredient is also a staple in skin creams and other health and beauty products. Unlike the cocoa butter in your dessert, the one in your skin care regimen won’t make you gain weight. But can it improve your appearance?
Cocoa butter is a type of fat that comes from cocoa beans. To harness cocoa butter, the beans are taken out of the larger cacao plant. Then they’re roasted, stripped, and pressed to separate out the fat—the cocoa butter. The remnants are then processed into cocoa powder.
Cocoa has been used in medicine for around 3,000 years. It was a favorite ingredient of the ancient Aztecs and Mayans, who even used cocoa for currency. More recently, researchers have discovered that compounds called phytochemicals in cocoa might help keep both your body and skin healthy.
Can cocoa butter really improve your skin’s appearance? Let’s take a look at the science behind the claims about this sweet beauty treat.
What are the benefits of cocoa butter?
Cocoa butter is high in fatty acids, which is why it’s often touted for its ability to hydrate and nourish the skin and improve elasticity. The fat in cocoa butter forms a protective barrier over skin to hold in moisture.
Cocoa butter is also rich in natural plant compounds called phytochemicals. These substances may improve blood flow to the skin and slow skin aging by protecting against damage from the sun’s harmful UV rays.
One common use of cocoa butter is to smooth scars, wrinkles, and other marks on the skin. Many women believe cocoa butter creams and lotions can be used during and after pregnancy to prevent and minimize the appearance of stretch marks. Cocoa butter has also been promoted to heal rashes from conditions like eczema and dermatitis.
What the research says
Cocoa butter might smell good and feel luxurious when you rub it on your body, but there isn’t much proof that it will improve your skin’s appearance. When it comes to treating scars and stretch marks, so far the research isn’t very compelling. Recent researchTrusted Source on using cocoa butter for stretch marks suggests that it doesn’t work any better than an inactive or placebo cream.
Some research does suggest that cocoa butter has the potential to prevent and treat skin diseases. It may also protect the skin from damage that can lead to premature aging. These effects still need to be confirmed by future studies.
Risks and warnings
Cocoa butter is considered safe to use on your skin. The makers of cocoa butter creams say it’s safe to use during pregnancy. For people who are sensitive to cocoa butter or other ingredients found in cocoa butter products, it may cause a rash or other allergic reaction.
Some have questioned the effects of the ingredients added to cocoa butter products. A 2015 studyTrusted Source found that one cocoa butter product had anti-estrogenic effects. This means it reduced or blocked the effects of the female hormone, estrogen, on the body. Being exposed to products with anti-estrogenic effects might have an effect on an adolescent’s development during puberty. Yet this evidence is still new, and cocoa butter hasn’t been proven to affect children’s development. -www.healthline.com