Sunday News

DIY smellies make dollars and scents

- SUSAN EDMUNDS

SPENDING a fortune on smellies? You don’t have to, says one New Zealand woman who has ditched all cosmetics and beauty products to make her own, saving thousands of dollars.

Lucy AitkenRead gave up shampoo five years ago as part of a quest to save money when she and her husband first had children. She wrote a book about the experience, which became popular around the world.

Now, she has been a year without any commercial beauty products, including things such as shower gell, toothpaste, sunscreen and deodorant. Her new book, Freedom Face, offers a how-to guide to help others who want to do the same.

She says she used to be a ‘‘bit of a cheapskate’’ when it came to toiletries but would still have spent at least $20 a month on shampoo and conditione­r alone.

Now she spends $20 on the ingredient­s it takes to make months’ worth of all her products.

‘‘I estimate I would have spent something like $1000 just on shampoo in a year. Now, I make all my own stuff and it lasts forever.’’

Statistics New Zealand estimates that in 2016 New Zealanders spent an average $1362 on personal grooming, including haircuts and cosmetics.

AitkenRead said a $30 or $40 haul of basic ingredient­s, such as oils, shea butter and honey, would allow her to make everything from deodorant to shower gel and moisturise­r.

‘‘It can be costly stocking your shelves to begin with but when I buy a chunk of beeswax that can last three years.’’

AitkenRead said the idea that more expensive products were better was not true. Many of the most expensive creams and potions were made using substances that were found in nature in their most powerful forms.

She said it did not require any particular skill to make your own beauty products.

‘‘All you need is a blender. If you can make a basic meal and follow a recipe, you can do it.’’

The book offers homemade alternativ­es to facial peels, mascara, face masks, facial serums, hair products, deodorants, shower gel, bug repellent and fake tan.

It also includes a summary of her own results with each homemade product.

She said many of the homemade products, such as face creams, were very like the massproduc­ed variety.

‘‘You can spend a lot on them and you wouldn’t believe how much like a store-bought product they can be and a hundredth of the price.

‘‘In the shop you buy a little bottle and it’s mega-bucks.’’

 ??  ?? Lucy AitkenRead
Lucy AitkenRead

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