New Zealand Listener

Hard to replicate

Preservati­ve-free cosmetics that survive in your bathroom cupboard are a challenge.

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These days, the natural skincare sector is booming, but when Aucklander­s Kati Kasza and her husband, Paul Westlake, founded Evolu 21 years ago, it was still a brave new world. Kasza, a former flight attendant, had been battling dry skin from years of working at high altitudes and was inspired to create a range of replenishi­ng products, based on natural botanicals, that would be safe for the body and the environmen­t.

However, producing a 100% natural skin cream on a commercial basis presents a challenge. The moment you add water to oil to create an emulsion you produce the perfect environmen­t for bacteria, yeast and mould to flourish – Kasza draws a comparison with homemade mayonnaise that lasts for only a few days in the fridge.

For a skincare product to have a long enough shelf life, particular­ly one that is likely to be stored in a steamy bathroom, some sort of preservati­ve is required.

In the early days of Evolu, the broadspect­rum preservati­ves of choice were parabens, which are effective against mould, yeast and bacteria. But there were concerns that these might play a role in endocrine disruption.

“Once that suspicion was raised, parabens became a no-go zone,” Westlake says. “What were we going to use instead?”

Other available preservati­ves were effective against one or other of the contaminan­ts but not all of them. Cosmetic ingredient manufactur­ers had to scramble to come up with a system that worked and was still safe when different ingredient­s were combined.

“There were alternativ­es that were okay for six months to a year and then stopped being effective. A year is not enough for a commercial product,” says Westlake.

The preservati­ve system used now in Evolu’s lotions and creams is a blend of benzyl alcohol and dehydroace­tic acid. These are plant-derived and considered safe for use in natural skincare – certainly safer than applying creams full of moulds and yeasts – but they are still synthesise­d.

A preservati­ve by definition has to be a toxic compound – after all, it is there to kill bacteria and prevent contaminat­ion. With a focus on healthy skin and the benefits of plant extracts, Kasza says Evolu is increasing­ly looking at simpler formulatio­ns.

“One of the things we’re doing now is creating more products that are anhydrous [containing no water so not requiring a preservati­ve]. Oils are becoming much more popular and we like to offer that as an option.”

“A year is not enough. There were alternativ­es that were okay for six months to a year and then stopped being effective. ”

 ??  ?? Preservati­vefree: Kati Kasza.
Preservati­vefree: Kati Kasza.

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