Orbygnia Speciosa Nut Oil

TL;DR. This ingredient is an emollient lipid that softens skin and hair, improves slip, and helps reduce transepidermal water loss by reinforcing the oil phase of a formula. It is especially useful in creams, balms, hair conditioners, cleansing bars, and body products where a light, cushiony feel is wanted.

What does Orbygnia Speciosa Nut Oil do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is an emollient lipid that softens skin and hair, improves slip, and helps reduce transepidermal water loss by reinforcing the oil phase of a formula. It is especially useful in creams, balms, hair conditioners, cleansing bars, and body products where a light, cushiony feel is wanted.

Is Orbygnia Speciosa Nut Oil clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally well tolerated and is not typically a restricted-list concern. As with other nut-derived oils, refined grades have very low protein content, but nut-sensitive users may still want ingredient transparency.

Is Orbygnia Speciosa Nut Oil sustainable?

This ingredient is plant-derived from harvested nuts, with supply-chain quality depending on regional sourcing, traceability, and fair collection practices. It is readily biodegradable and does not raise the persistence concerns associated with many synthetic film-forming materials.

Is Orbygnia Speciosa Nut Oil COSMOS-approved?

This ingredient is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when it meets the standard’s sourcing, processing, and documentation requirements. It aligns well with Green Chemistry principles because it is renewable, biodegradable, and typically obtained through mechanical pressing and physical refining rather than intensive synthetic chemistry.

How does Orbygnia Speciosa Nut Oil work chemically?

This material is a triglyceride-rich oil with a high proportion of saturated medium-chain fatty acids, especially lauric and myristic acid residues, which gives it a semi-solid texture near room temperature and a relatively low oxidation tendency. Typical use levels range from about 1 to 10 percent in emulsions and hair care, with higher levels possible in anhydrous balms, but texture can shift noticeably around its melting range of roughly 24 to 30°C.

Last updated 2026-05-13