Atlantic Kelp+

TL;DR. This ingredient is typically used as a botanical conditioning and skin-feel additive, bringing polysaccharides, minerals, and small organic compounds that can support slip, softness, and a hydrated feel. In hair care, it is more of a supportive conditioning extract than a primary cleanser, emulsifier, or preservative.

What does Atlantic Kelp+ do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is typically used as a botanical conditioning and skin-feel additive, bringing polysaccharides, minerals, and small organic compounds that can support slip, softness, and a hydrated feel. In hair care, it is more of a supportive conditioning extract than a primary cleanser, emulsifier, or preservative.

Is Atlantic Kelp+ clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally accepted when supplier documentation confirms contaminant testing and a compliant preservation system. The main watchpoints are natural batch variability, possible trace marine minerals, and any undisclosed carrier or preservative in the supplied extract.

Is Atlantic Kelp+ sustainable?

This material is usually sourced from a renewable marine botanical feedstock and is expected to be biodegradable as a natural extract. Sustainability depends on harvesting controls, regional management, drying and extraction energy, and testing for accumulated metals from the growing environment.

Is Atlantic Kelp+ COSMOS-approved?

It can align with COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when harvested, processed, extracted, and preserved under approved conditions, but the branded form needs supplier confirmation. From a Green Chemistry perspective, it fits best when made with water, glycerin, or other benign solvents and verified for responsible sourcing and biodegradability.

How does Atlantic Kelp+ work chemically?

Chemically, this is a complex extract rich in hydrophilic biopolymers, salts, trace minerals, and low-molecular-weight plant metabolites rather than a single defined molecule. It is commonly used at low cosmetic levels as an aqueous or glycerin-based extract, and formulators usually monitor color, odor, electrolyte load, microbial preservation, and compatibility with cationic conditioners or carbomer-type thickeners.

Last updated 2026-05-13