Lupinus Albus Seed

TL;DR. This ingredient is used mainly as a botanical skin-conditioning material, often in powder or processed-it form for texture, mild exfoliation, or extractable nutritive components. It can also support sensorial body and absorbency in dry or emulsion formats.

What does Lupinus Albus Seed do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used mainly as a botanical skin-conditioning material, often in powder or processed-it form for texture, mild exfoliation, or extractable nutritive components. It can also support sensorial body and absorbency in dry or emulsion formats.

Is Lupinus Albus Seed clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally straightforward and has little restricted-list friction. The main watchpoints are agricultural residues, microbial quality in powders, and sensitivity in people with legume allergies.

Is Lupinus Albus Seed sustainable?

This ingredient comes from a renewable agricultural crop and is expected to be biodegradable. As a legume-derived material, its crop system can support lower synthetic nitrogen demand, though the final footprint depends on farming practices, transport, and processing.

Is Lupinus Albus Seed COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and can qualify for COSMOS-organic when sourced and processed as an allowed agricultural raw material. It aligns well with Green Chemistry when minimally processed, especially through renewable sourcing, biodegradability, and low-solvent physical milling or extraction.

How does Lupinus Albus Seed work chemically?

This material is a whole botanical it matrix, primarily storage proteins and polysaccharides with smaller amounts of lipids, minerals, and phenolic compounds. In formulas it is usually dispersed rather than dissolved, and water-based systems need attention to particle settling, swelling, preservation, and microbial specifications.

Last updated 2026-05-13