Posts Tagged ‘organic’

First impressions of Karen Murrell

December 12th, 2009

Amy and I are huge Skinfood fans, as we’ve mentioned before, so when Amy heard that Karen Murrell who had originally developed the line, had started a new company, we were super excited. If you’re naming a product after yourself, you’re going to be damn sure that it’s awesome, so we were keen to try it out. After emailing Karen, we were even more excited when this amazing parcel turned up on my doorstep:

The Karen Murrell range

The Karen Murrell range

OH MY STARS! Seriously, this box is beautiful and it sings its eco-cred loud and proud. The inks are made of soy, the lipstick cases are made of corn so they’ll start biodegrading within a year, and the product packaging is recyclable #1. And as for the products themselves, well! We received the Aqua River face cream for me, True Miracle Intense Balm, Absolute Luxury Face Moisturiser, Pure Honesty Cleansing Gel, Nature’s Essence Body Scrub, a moisture stick lip balm and lipsticks in Red Shimmer, Cordovan Natural, Violet Mousse, and Pink Starlet. Each product lists what percent organic it is, and ingredients are primarily plant-based, not chemicals.

Our first impressions: The packaging is beautiful. The smells are wonderfully different (frankincense, grape seed, geranium, yum!). The scrub is gentle and actually moisturising. The lipsticks compare well with even heavy weight brands like MAC. The moisturiser leaves skin feeling very soft and natural – no greasy residue.

We could go on and on, so how about instead we do some follow-up reviews of the individual products soon.

Review: A’kin Rosehip Oil

October 7th, 2009

akin 001I heard all about the benefits of using essential oils on skin from Eleanor Laban, creator of hair product Dollop. Ages ago I interviewed her because she has particularly good skin and I wanted to know her secret. The podcast of my interview is here – you should have a listen because she’s an interesting lady.

So inspired by Eleanor I stocked up on some A’kin Rosehip Oil from Australian natural skin care makers The Purist Company. It was on sale at my local pharmacy so only cost about $15.

Before I started using it, I expected it to make my skin oily and cause my make-up to look greasy or slide around. But not so. It sinks into my skin remarkably fast. I even follow the oil with A’kin moisture cream and it too sinks in.  And I can follow up with my usual make-up.

I use it twice daily and will continue to use it.

I’ve also been using A’kin facial scrub. It’s not all that gentle though – I prefer really gentle scrubs.

Anyway, here are the benefits of Rosehip Oil as I see them:

  • Natural. It’s just one ingredient – organic rosehip oil. No worries about parabens and sulphates and the like.
  • It’s cheap. Compared to other moisturisers it’s actually quite cheap. A bottle like I bought lasts months and months because you only use a few drops each times.
  • It makes my skin feel really soft and smooth. I think it’s evened out my skin too – no dry or oily patches any more.
  • It’s versatile. I use it on my dry, itchy legs after shaving and on my finger nail cuticles.

And I have a tip for application. Rub a few drops into your hands and then press both your hands vertically onto your cheeks for a few moments. Then move your hands so one is pressed on your forehead and the other over your chin and mouth. So you’re just pressing and holding letting the oil seep into you skin. This seems to work much better than rubbing it into face and is much gentler.

Wearing green

April 25th, 2009

At our first birthday party, we did a clothes swap – our pretty guests brought along once-cherished clothes and accessories, got to try on others’ duds, and take home some real gems. I came away with new jeans, a World skirt, a Ruby hoodie, and more! All for free and all good for the environment. (btw we’ll be taking the left over duds to the sallies).

Considering how much space our wardrobes take up, how much resource used to produce garments, and how much chemical waste and electricity used to care for our clothes, clothes are a big issue for the environment. (Not to mention the evils of child labour and distorted body image rife in fashion.)

Watch this video – it give tips on buying clothes, as well as suping-up old clothes instead of throwing them away. Kathmandu does some nice ranges of organic and recycled plastic clothing (at least I think they still do), and Duncan & Prudence jeans in Wellington does organic denim.

In the news: sustainable fashion

October 19th, 2008

This from the NZ Herald:

Kate Sylvester and her team have won the Emerging Small and Medium Business Award at the Sustainable Business Network Awards. Sylvester’s initiatives, including day-to-day recycling and commitment to keeping garments New Zealand made, were recognised by the judges.

Kate also gets a congratulations in Oct 08’s Marie Claire magazine. She makes all her knits are made from Zqued-graded wool, meaning each garment can be traced from farm to runway, ensuring it is organic and sustainable. Kate uses eco friendly light bulbs in her offices, which also have worm farms. Cotton in her winter 08 collection is organic, and by next year her label will be carbon-neutral. Read more here.

Flippin’ heck that’s awesome.