- Alkyl Phenoxy ethanols (APEs)
- Ammonia
- Butyl cellosolve
- ethylene glycol monbutyl
- chlorine bleach/sodium hypochlorite
- crystalline silica
- dichloromoethane (DCM or methylene chloride
- diethanolamine (DEA)
- dioxane
- ethylene glycol
- formaldehyde
- glycol ethers
- nitrobenzene
- para-dichlorobenzene (p-dichlorobezene or p-DCB)
- phosphates
- sodium hydroxide
- sodium lauryl/laureth sulfate
- synthetic fragrances
Showing posts with label toxic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toxic. Show all posts
Monday, June 13, 2011
Cleaning Product Ingredients to Avoid
Facts about Cosmetics
Red-Light Ingredients
1. Fragrance- Various chemicals used to make a product smell a certain way. There is no regulation for it. Many contain neurotoxins and allergens. 2. Phthalates- chemical group used to add flexibility and dissolvability to other ingredients. Common in perfumes, hairspray, and nail polish. They are a hormone disruptor.
3. Parabens- extremely common type of perservative. Extend shelf life of shampoos, lotions, toothpaste, hand soaps, ect. Four types: methylparaben, ethylparaben, butylparaben, and propylparaben. Hormone disruptor. Usually listed on the label.
4. Petroleum- Contains a contaminate known as BAHS which is a possible carcinogen. Put in lipsticks, moisturizers, sunscreen, ect.
5. SLS (Sodium Lauryl/Laureth Sulfates)- Foaming agent. Cause Skin irritation.
6. Mercury- Effects the human nervous system. Still find it in products like lip liners.
7. Formaldehyde- Shows up in eye shadow, mascaras, and nail polish. Known human carcinogen.
8. Skin Whiteners- Hydroquinone. Is a known animal carcinogen and toxic. Allowed in US but not Europe. Found in facecreams, lipsticks, ect. Anything that "lightens" the skin.
9. Lead- Allowed in cosmetics. Possible human carcinogen.
Snow, Sara. Sara Snow's fresh living: the essential room-by-room guide to a greener, healthier family, and home.. New York, N.Y.: Bantam Dell, 2009. Print.
Labels:
carcinogen,
cosmetics,
green,
health,
home,
laureth sulfates,
make-up,
SLS,
sodium lauryl,
toxic
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
