Beauty Tips from Ancient Moroccan Tradition
Saturday, June 9, 2007
Use Olive Oil for Total Skin Health
The Moroccan tradition relies heavily on olive oil and extracts from the olive leaf in their beauty products and treatments. Use plain extra virgin olive oil all over your body for moisture. Try using warmed olive oil in your hair as a hot oil treatment.
Treat your Face with Moroccan Red Clay
Moroccan red clay or lava clay is used as an additive and by itself in beauty masks, soaps, and lotions. Make your own facial mask with Moroccan red clay for dry skin by adding enough honey or olive oil to make a paste. Apply the paste to the face for 15 to 20 minute and rinse with tepid water. Use plain water or coconut oil with the clay for oily skin.
Treat your face with Moroccan Rhassoul Clay and honey
Deep clean your skin without drying it out using Moroccan Rhassoul Clay and honey. Clays can be drying to those with already dry skin so we balance the Moroccan clay that draws out the impurities from your pores, with a natural moisturizing humectant, honey. Added to this mask is antiseptic orange peel and detoxifying Red Sandalwood extract, which makes this mask perfect for those with oily skin or large pores. It will refine your pores and smooth your skin.
Utilize Moroccan Argan Oil
Argan oil has been used for centuries to treat the skin and hair to maintain beauty and youthfulness. Add the argan oil to olive oil or coconut oil for a moisturizing hair and skin treatment.
Try out Moroccan Rose Otto Bath
Rose Otto, known as the Queen of Flower Oils, is one of the world’s most expensive and revered essential oils. This bath oil contains Moroccan Rose Otto Oil which is steam distilled from petals harvested at dawn and is beneficial to dry and sensitive skin. Its exquisite, sensual scent has stress relieving, uplifting and soothing properties. This is a Clean Product formulated to promote naturally healthy skin. It is free from petrochemicals, sulfates, synthetic fragrance, PEGs, animal products, synthetic colours, propylene glycol, TEA, DEA and parabens