Why You May Not Want to Use Micas
Gluten Free Make-Up Natural Make-UpPublished September 23, 2011 at 1:59 pm Comments OffI recently posted about why the most reputable brands in natural beauty favor cosmetic grade iron oxides for pigmentation than any other ingredient. Even though in accordance with FDA regulation, cosmetic grade iron oxides are lab-produced, not mined.
This week a very exciting new educational took was launched which helps educate us as consumers about some of the unjust methods that are used for gathering raw materials for many of our every day consumer products, SlaveryFootprint.org. According to this new State Department funded site: Every day tens of thousands of American women buy makeup. Every day tens of thousands of Indian children mine mica, which is the little sparkles in the makeup.
While the cosmetic industry does not require cosmetic grade micas be naturally sourced, or lab-produced, both versions are used by nearly all mineral and traditional cosmetic companies. Unlike iron oxides, which for cosmetic use must be lab-produced, there is no current way to differentiate whether a produce contains unethically sourced, mined micas, or those that are synthetically produced.
Hopefully well-respected natural beauty brands will quickly take steps to ensure that all of their micas are synthetic, but for now, this is just another reason to look for those mica-free natural cosmetics lines that use cosmetic grade iron oxides instead.


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