(10-12-2016, 05:26 PM)Tidepool Wrote:(10-11-2016, 03:45 PM)BadDad Wrote: I think fragranced hygiene products have been around long enough and used by a wide enough data set that a reasonable assumption can be made without specific lab testing results.
A hundred years of scenting soaps and fragrances for people to use directly on the skin and no record of major mutations, defects, or associations with onset disorders may not be scientifically conclusive but it is certainly statistically viable...
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I agree with you. However, a lot of these products may have been checked by independent sources. But if Harry down the street gets a recipe to make a soap and he puts a little of this and a little in it could there be a problem? With that in mind my face looks as good as it did several years ago so maybe not a big deal especially when it takes over a month to go through my rotation.
Unless Harry down the street is using an EO, FO, or absolute that has never been used before, I doubt there is a problem.
The oils and absolutes themselves have been studied and tested. We know what effects they have, both positive and negative. Combining them shouldn't alter their viability and efficacy, nor should it change their toxicity...
Bergamot is phototoxic whether it is combined with lime or patchouli...it doesn't change the properties of bergamot itself...
-Chris~Head Shaver~