Genuinely think you're gonna be the reason I have a job in the future. I'm 16 and obsessed with cosmetics science and youre the smartest lady I have ever heard speak
Thank you for watching. You can learn this in full detail by studying with us - all online - learn anywhere in the world! Please contact us for course information and which course is going to best suit you: info@personalcarescience.com.au You can also get your formulation questions answered LIVE with Belinda, join our Patreon channel here: www.patreon.com/personalcarescience
Thanks for watching. We have loads of videos that can help you out! Please go to the search bar on our channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCczaVLd160LPFdn9E8hrYxA And enter the topic to find related videos. Happy formulating!
Thank you for watching. We have loads of videos that can help you out! Please go to the search bar on our channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCczaVLd160LPFdn9E8hrYxA And enter the topic to find related videos. Happy formulating!
Thank you for watching. We have loads of videos that can help you out! Please go to the search bar on our channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCczaVLd160LPFdn9E8hrYxA And enter the topic to find related videos. Happy formulating!
Hi Lisa, the glass plates are watch glasses, you can get them from any lab supplier. The whisk I got from a catering supplier. You can also contact us for a list of our lab equipment: info@personalcarescience.com.au
Hi Thanks for the great information, your videos are the best educating videos out there. I was wondering where I can get the full ingredient list and formulas of these beautiful products you just made.
We’re happy to provide the full formula, ingredient, supplier, input and method details, please email us: info@personalcarescience.com.au and we can send you a link to access ALL our free formulas and reports. Happy formulating!
does the word "clinically proven" that makes us allowable to use the in-vivo claim in our product eventhough the overall formula is different from the manufacturer tested product?
Please remember to keep it specific like I have talked about in this video, for example, 'This moisturiser contains Milk Peptide Complex which has been clinically proven to...' - making sure you have stabilised the active properly, used the right amount etc. You can't say your product is clinically proven unless you have tested your product. Claims must be truthful and specific to ensure this, I hope this helps, please watch the video again if you aren't sure I am very specific about this. Happy formulating :)
Hi Belinda! Excellent video. You're simply amazing. Pls I'd like to inquire from you if citric acid can be used instead of sodium citrate and what the real differences are between the two?
Sodium citrate is used to hold pH in a tight range when used with sodium hydroxide and citric acid; citric acid is used to lower pH. Learn how to formulate with active ingredients, including how to stabilise them in your formulas and check quality/stability with our Certificate in Advanced Cosmetic Science: personalcarescience.com.au/CosmeticScience/CertificateinAdvancedCosmeticScience-478/ or Diploma of Personal Care Formulation: personalcarescience.com.au/CosmeticScience/DiplomaofPersonalCareFormulation-479/
Thank you. We have loads of videos that can help you out! Please go to the search bar on our channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCczaVLd160LPFdn9E8hrYxA And enter the topic to find related videos. Happy formulating!
Not in this case - you need a very specific method and formula to stabilise this active, as shown in the video. Learn how to formulate with active ingredients, including how to stabilise them in your formulas and check quality/stability with our Certificate in Advanced Cosmetic Science: personalcarescience.com.au/CosmeticScience/CertificateinAdvancedCosmeticScience-478/ or Diploma of Personal Care Formulation: personalcarescience.com.au/CosmeticScience/DiplomaofPersonalCareFormulation-479/
Belinda thank you for the excellent video. I want to request just two small clarifications, the supplier's guide is saying to ideally pre-disperse the active in buffered solution, whereas you add the active directly at the end of the emulsion (obviously at the recommended pH). Could you kindly guide me would it be better to pre-disperse the active in a part-buffered water phase and then add it at the end below 40ºC? Secondly, if I also want to use delivery enhancers like DMI PC should I add that in the part water with the active or how can that be added if the active is to be added directly at the end?
For more information on how to test pH, please watch this video: ruclips.net/video/kwvLAK3KauM/видео.html and to make buffer solutions please watch the end of this video: Beginners cosmetic science lecture 1: ruclips.net/video/s0I7ZsGqUhk/видео.html You may also find this video useful: Should cosmetics be diluted to test pH: ruclips.net/video/8ehi-7prATM/видео.html
Yes but you would need to contact your CLR rep to get the efficacy data to adjust the input amount to ensure you use the right amount to get the same in vivo results - you will need more of the liposome material but it is an enhanced delivery system, happy formulating!
No - and we're not creating a product with pharmaceutical effects. A pharmaceutical level product is one that is used to treat a diagnosable or medically treatable condition; we're instead supporting the healthy functioning of the skin's cells to retain a youthful appearance! It is not like using a restricted or pharmaceutical agent - they are limited by regulations and entirely different materials. I hope this helps you understand the difference :)
It's really a thin hairline walk between a drug, a medical device and a cosmetic product, as actives like for example vitamins, metal oxides, acids and lipids are useful for all of these applications. Cosmetic products can even be marketed and used for disease prevention and accompanying treatment, see for example toothpaste, mouthwash and sunscreen. They can even contain some classical drug actives, like anti-dandruff shampoos containing ketoconazole. For dermatological products, it often comes down to the concentration of the active ingredients, and the marketed use case as to how they can be classified. It would only be unethical if the products wouldn't undergo a strict safety evaluation before actually being sold to customers.
Genuinely think you're gonna be the reason I have a job in the future. I'm 16 and obsessed with cosmetics science and youre the smartest lady I have ever heard speak
Thank you for watching. You can learn this in full detail by studying with us - all online - learn anywhere in the world! Please contact us for course information and which course is going to best suit you: info@personalcarescience.com.au
You can also get your formulation questions answered LIVE with Belinda, join our Patreon channel here: www.patreon.com/personalcarescience
So much complex information that is so much appreciated. I can't imagine how much more there is to learn from doing your course. Thank you
Thank you - happy formulating!
There is a lot, believe me - I am doing the course!
your videos are so detailed and easy to follow and educational. subscribing straight away.
Thank you!
Thank you so much for your information about the skin care essentials...❤
Please email us for full formulation, method and supplier details: info@personalcarescience.com.au we provide this free. Happy formulating!
Always delivering a great content! So informative! Thanks for another great video!
Thanks for watching. We have loads of videos that can help you out! Please go to the search bar on our channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCczaVLd160LPFdn9E8hrYxA And enter the topic to find related videos. Happy formulating!
This channel is brilliant, I'm enjoying so many of the videos. Thank you so much!
Thank you for watching. We have loads of videos that can help you out! Please go to the search bar on our channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCczaVLd160LPFdn9E8hrYxA And enter the topic to find related videos. Happy formulating!
Very informative content👍please keep doing what you are doing
Thank you for watching. We have loads of videos that can help you out! Please go to the search bar on our channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCczaVLd160LPFdn9E8hrYxA And enter the topic to find related videos. Happy formulating!
Where can I buy the whisk you use in all of your video? What are those glass plates called and where can I buy them? Thanks.
Hi Lisa, the glass plates are watch glasses, you can get them from any lab supplier. The whisk I got from a catering supplier. You can also contact us for a list of our lab equipment: info@personalcarescience.com.au
Ordinary copper peptide healed my crow eyes within 3 days and I always had them since young age. Can you please find out how they made their formulas?
Hi
Thanks for the great information, your videos are the best educating videos out there.
I was wondering where I can get the full ingredient list and formulas of these beautiful products you just made.
We’re happy to provide the full formula, ingredient, supplier, input and method details, please email us: info@personalcarescience.com.au and we can send you a link to access ALL our free formulas and reports. Happy formulating!
Great info thanks
Glad it was helpful!
does the word "clinically proven" that makes us allowable to use the in-vivo claim in our product eventhough the overall formula is different from the manufacturer tested product?
Please remember to keep it specific like I have talked about in this video, for example, 'This moisturiser contains Milk Peptide Complex which has been clinically proven to...' - making sure you have stabilised the active properly, used the right amount etc. You can't say your product is clinically proven unless you have tested your product. Claims must be truthful and specific to ensure this, I hope this helps, please watch the video again if you aren't sure I am very specific about this. Happy formulating :)
Hi Belinda! Excellent video. You're simply amazing. Pls I'd like to inquire from you if citric acid can be used instead of sodium citrate and what the real differences are between the two?
Sodium citrate is used to hold pH in a tight range when used with sodium hydroxide and citric acid; citric acid is used to lower pH. Learn how to formulate with active ingredients, including how to stabilise them in your formulas and check quality/stability with our Certificate in Advanced Cosmetic Science: personalcarescience.com.au/CosmeticScience/CertificateinAdvancedCosmeticScience-478/ or Diploma of Personal Care Formulation: personalcarescience.com.au/CosmeticScience/DiplomaofPersonalCareFormulation-479/
Please email us for full references on this topic absolutely FREE: info@personalcarescience.com.au
very informative , thank you very much
Thank you. We have loads of videos that can help you out! Please go to the search bar on our channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCczaVLd160LPFdn9E8hrYxA And enter the topic to find related videos. Happy formulating!
When you add the actives after testing the pH won’t you need to adjust the pH again?
Not in this case - you need a very specific method and formula to stabilise this active, as shown in the video. Learn how to formulate with active ingredients, including how to stabilise them in your formulas and check quality/stability with our Certificate in Advanced Cosmetic Science: personalcarescience.com.au/CosmeticScience/CertificateinAdvancedCosmeticScience-478/ or Diploma of Personal Care Formulation: personalcarescience.com.au/CosmeticScience/DiplomaofPersonalCareFormulation-479/
Belinda thank you for the excellent video. I want to request just two small clarifications, the supplier's guide is saying to ideally pre-disperse the active in buffered solution, whereas you add the active directly at the end of the emulsion (obviously at the recommended pH). Could you kindly guide me would it be better to pre-disperse the active in a part-buffered water phase and then add it at the end below 40ºC? Secondly, if I also want to use delivery enhancers like DMI PC should I add that in the part water with the active or how can that be added if the active is to be added directly at the end?
For more information on how to test pH, please watch this video: ruclips.net/video/kwvLAK3KauM/видео.html and to make buffer solutions please watch the end of this video: Beginners cosmetic science lecture 1: ruclips.net/video/s0I7ZsGqUhk/видео.html You may also find this video useful: Should cosmetics be diluted to test pH: ruclips.net/video/8ehi-7prATM/видео.html
Can CLR’s MPC Liposomes (liquid) be used in place of the MPC in this formulation?
Yes but you would need to contact your CLR rep to get the efficacy data to adjust the input amount to ensure you use the right amount to get the same in vivo results - you will need more of the liposome material but it is an enhanced delivery system, happy formulating!
Isn’t it illegal or at least unethical to develop a product with pharmaceutical effects but mask it as a cosmetic?
No - and we're not creating a product with pharmaceutical effects. A pharmaceutical level product is one that is used to treat a diagnosable or medically treatable condition; we're instead supporting the healthy functioning of the skin's cells to retain a youthful appearance! It is not like using a restricted or pharmaceutical agent - they are limited by regulations and entirely different materials. I hope this helps you understand the difference :)
It's really a thin hairline walk between a drug, a medical device and a cosmetic product, as actives like for example vitamins, metal oxides, acids and lipids are useful for all of these applications. Cosmetic products can even be marketed and used for disease prevention and accompanying treatment, see for example toothpaste, mouthwash and sunscreen. They can even contain some classical drug actives, like anti-dandruff shampoos containing ketoconazole. For dermatological products, it often comes down to the concentration of the active ingredients, and the marketed use case as to how they can be classified.
It would only be unethical if the products wouldn't undergo a strict safety evaluation before actually being sold to customers.