Pure Unrefined Shea Butter: Too Heavy for Some
Uses, But 4 Reasons It Might Be the Right Choice for You
Experience the Anti-aging, Healing, Prevention and Skin
Protection Properties of Shea
Well, with the advent of
skin cancers and melanomas, it seems those days are gone forever.
Getting some sunshine is still good for most of us, but
overexposure can be detrimental to our health.
Pure
unrefined shea butter is a lot like the sun in that regard. While
there are at least 36 shea butter uses for natural skin
care—including being touted for its anti-aging, healing, prevention
and skin protection and emollient properties—there are certain skin
care rituals that are better left to using shea butter in a mixture
with other natural skin care ingredients.
So
why is this?
Well,
if you are at all familiar with 100% pure, unrefined shea butter,
than you know that it is a solid compound with a distinctive nutty
smell to it. And for some, this smell, which dissipates shortly
after the shea is applied to the skin, does take some getting use
to for the uninitiated. Of course, you can purchase your shea with
certain essential oils added to it to mask or enhance the smell,
but then can you still call it 100% pure?
To
use the pure solid shea requires a little extra time to spread on
to the skin, and if you will be putting it on your entire body,
most ardent users find it easier and faster to melt the shea down
into an oil form so that it spreads easier and takes less time to
apply. You can heat it at very low temperatures so that the
compound does not lose any of its medicinal properties in the
process. One easy way to do this is to set your microwave on the
defrost setting to perform the shea melt down.
Once
the shea is melted, you will find that it is still a very heavy and
thick oil, perhaps too heavy for what you propose to use it for. In
the winter, of course, you might use a little of this heavy oil on
your face to protect it and insulate it from the
wind and the cold, but in the summer time this oil simply does not
work as well in its all-natural form. It makes the skin look
greasy, so it really needs to be cut (i.e. combined with other skin
care ingredients) if it is to be applied to the
face.
So
with the extra work that goes into the preparation for using the
100% pure shea butter, you can see that you almost have to make
time to use this product. But the benefits are
tremendous.
Next
are four good reasons to consider making time for and using 100%
pure and unrefined shea butter in your hair and skin care
regimen.
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