Our Organic Shaving Gel Works Better
A good shaving cream serves three purposes:
1. Provides a protective barrier between your skin and the razor blade
2. Reduces friction between the skin and your razor blade
3. Stands the hair on end allowing for a closer, more even shave
Consider the shaving cream in your cupboard. It is probably a foam, or a gel that turns to foam. It is an unnatural emulsifier added to some form of soap, acid or hydrogenated fat that produce a thick, white foam.
But we
use aloe vera, coconut oil, and other natural oils and emulsifiers which provide better protection, anti-friction, as well as excellent skin conditioning; all providing a smoother shave with fewer nicks and cuts.
Next reason you save money buying ours.
Organic Shaving Gel is 100%... Saving Product
You are buying air.
Did you know that your shaving cream is mostly air?
In a typical aerosol can, the shaving cream ingredients occupy only a small portion of the can. The propellant or gas occupies 4 to 5 percent of the can; a larger amount would dry the shaving cream as it came out of the can, rendering it unusable.
We don't use aerosol, This means that when you buy a 6 oz. Jar of our product, it's like buying 5 to 10 cans of aerosol shaving cream! Wow. No brainer there.
Next reason - our products are natural. no parabans . No cancer.
So you know what PENTAERYTHRITYL TETRAISOSTEARATE is? Pretty hard on your liver, Why not rub ACRYLATES/C10-30 ALKYL ACRYLATE CROSSPOLYMER on your handsome face for some heart burn.
In case you're not aware, the skin (actually the dermis) is the largest organ in the human body.you got a 60 percent absorbtion rate through the skin and into the blood stream (this is how nicotine patches work).
You have been duped. And you buy chemical cream to rub and age your face. To make matters worse, some of the chemicals in shaving cream are proven carcinogens (cancer causing agents!)
Look at your brand of shaving cream. Brands such as Barbasol, Colgate, Edge, Gillette, and Noxema usually contain an innocuous sounding chemical called triethanolamine (also known as TEA on product labels). Fatty acids like TEA are used as emollients and thickeners in numerous consumer products, including cosmetic formulations, shampoos, hair dyes, and bath additives.
Triethanolamine by itself is not particularly toxic but it usually contains small amounts of diethanolamine (also abbreviated on labels as DEA). In a recent experimental study conducted under the auspices of the federal National Toxicology Program, diethanolamine was found to cause liver tumors.
To make matters worse, DEA forms an even more potent carcinogen in the presence of nitrosating contaminants that enter raw materials through the environment or from bulk storage containers. The carcinogen (known as nitrosodiethanolamine) may even be formed while products sit on store shelves. Not all products will become contaminated, but some will and some won't. The consumer has no way of knowing which products contain carcinogenic contaminants.
My husband used our shaving gel and was very unhappy. He said I don't like this...
I said why!!!!! He than grumbled, "my face feels just like a womans. I want a rough face." A little clue all you men... Woman don't like feeling a rough face. Thats why they spend a lot of money to soften their bodies. After the initial shock of having a smooth face for the first time, my husband sings a new tune. It is hard to give up the gas that these chemical foam cans offer us. But smoother is better, not chemical gas.