Saturday, December 17, 2011

New Fragrance Lines


With Christmas just around the corner, the Skinflint Workshop has been a busy place these last few weeks.

The beautiful looking and smelling Tayberry & Teakwood Soap is now a permanent line in the product range. It has proved so popular and has sold out completely within weeks.

A new batch is curing in the Skinflint workshop right now and it will be ready to use on the 16th January. I will label and have it ready for sale before Christmas. A little note will come with it to indicate the curing time it needs.

Two new Soy Melt fragrances are available. The luscious Very Vanilla and the breezy Sea Moss are great new additions to the Home Fragrance range. Along with these, there's the cute little Soy Candles available in four fragrances - Bananarama, Mimosa Breeze, Dragon's Blood and Fresh Cut Roses. At only $9.00, they make a great small gift or addition to a gift basket.


Wednesday, December 14, 2011

The Container or the Product?


I make skin care products from my little workshop next to my house. I’m only small scale and my premise is to provide good plant based skin care products with all the extra goodies of the big brands, but at a reasonable price.
I do this by using basic packaging and basic labelling. My products are functional, not pretty. I don’t expect my customers to pay for packaging, glossy magazine advertising and movie star endorsement. They should be paying for the product itself.

I was not surprised then, to find a prospective wholesaler tell me that she loved my products, but she wouldn’t sell them in her salon because of the packaging. She said the hair products were lovely and all my creams were just beautiful. But, she just couldn’t bring herself to put a plain packaged product on her shelves.

She has expensive, exquisitely packaged and labeled skin care products on her shelves already and was looking for another line, and, bless her, she wanted something local.

In the time I’ve been making my products, I’ve spent a lot of time researching skin and hair care products and what goes into them. I spend hours looking at labels when I go shopping and am amazed at the amount of rubbishy ingredients in top label products. Clinique moisturisers, for example, contain mineral oil. While mineral oil isn’t harmful, it is a ‘nothing’ ingredient. It doesn’t penetrate the top layers of the skin or nourish in any way. It will actually prevent anything else in the product from penetrating, making the product useless.
Worst of all, it is dirt cheap. Yet, Clinique market their Dramatically Different Moisturising Lotion for $74 for 125ml.

At the very high end, we have L’Occitane Immortelle Divine Cream at $140 for a mere 50ml. Containing nothing more than water, plant oils, waxes, vitamin E and A, in my mind, this is an abomination! The jar is absolutely beautiful, a collector’s item, but really, is that what you want to buy – a beautiful jar? Even worse is the variety of preservatives in this product, not one, but a whack of them, including Phenoxyethanol, Methylparaben, Ethylparaben, Butylparaben, Isobutylparaben, Propylparaben & Tetrasodium EDTA.

Then there’s the organic, pure and natural skin care ranges with nothing artificial, no ‘chemicals’, nothing man made. Packaged in expensive containers in lovely little boxes, these products have little more than water (pure spring water, of course), plant oils and emulsifiers in them. Yet, a product like Burt’s Bees Moisturising Day Crème costs $30 for just 57g.  The ingredients of this product are basically, water, oils, beeswax and borax (the emulsifier), thickeners and anti oxidants to prevent the oils going rancid. 

Do people really want a product because it’s in a beautiful double walled glass jar with a metallic gold lid? Does this make them feel the product inside must be so much better than anything in a plastic flip top tube?

If you’re interested in value for money, please be discriminatory and read the labels on your skin care products. Don’t pay for advertising, packaging and endorsements. Look for the products with the basic packaging, little advertising and great ingredients.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Soy Candles

The latest "The Skinny" can be found on the Skinflint Website.  There's information on different ways to use some of the products, the latest online special and the lowdown on Enriching Face Lotion.

The Skinflint Workshop is back in action with lots of products being manufactured. Some will be packaged differently until stocks of new containers arrive. Since the regular labels may not fit on the different container, the labelling may also look different. Hopefully by January, all will be rectified!

Dragon's Blood Soy Candle

I've been making some gorgeously fragrant soy candles in these cute little Baby Metro Jars. They will be available for sale soon at only $10.00 $9.00 each. Fragrances will be listed on the website as they become available. The apple gives you an idea of the size of these cute candles.

Soy wax burns cleanly and leaves no residue unlike paraffin wax. Most candles purchased from shops (such as Dusk) are made from paraffin wax since it is harder and less likely to become damaged in transit. When the flame is extinguished, the smoke is black. If the candle is in a container, the glass becomes black after time. Soy wax doesn't do this, making it the choice for the candles from Skinflint. It is far more environmentally friendly and is easily cleaned up with soap and water.

Soy Candles make a great small gift for teachers and work colleagues and are an ideal item to include in a gift basket. I expect these candles to be snapped up, so get your orders in quickly!

Fragrances so far are:

  •  Mimosa Breeze - A very complex, exotic and soft feminine-floral scent with hints of warm jasmine, rosewood, musk and cedarwood.
  • Fresh Cut Roses - the ultimate Rose fragrance, just like a whole lot of freshly picked rose petals.
  • Bananarama - a fruity combination of tropical banana, pineapple and grapefruit with the tiniest hint of coconut.
  • Dragon's Blood - warm, woody and earthy scent, with notes of amber, vanilla, sandalwood, patchouli & light tones of powdery musks and hints of asian florals to bring out subtle spice undertones.