Rosewood\

TL;DR. This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance material, adding a woody, floral aroma to perfumes, skin care, hair care, and body products.

What does Rosewood\ do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance material, adding a woody, floral aroma to perfumes, skin care, hair care, and body products.

Is Rosewood\ clean?

Clean-beauty frameworks generally allow natural fragrance materials, but this ingredient carries allergen-disclosure and sensitization considerations because it is rich in linalool and other terpene components. Its standing depends heavily on oxidation control, IFRA compliance, and transparent sourcing.

Is Rosewood\ sustainable?

This material is plant-derived and biodegradable, but its traditional wood-based sourcing has been linked to pressure on slow-growing forest species. More responsible supply relies on documented legal harvest, plantation sources, or use from renewable plant parts rather than wild timber depletion.

Is Rosewood\ COSMOS-approved?

It can be permitted under COSMOS-natural or COSMOS-organic only when the fragrance material and sourcing meet the standard’s natural-origin and protected-species requirements. From a Green Chemistry view, it has strengths as a renewable, biodegradable material, with caveats around land use, traceability, and resource pressure.

How does Rosewood\ work chemically?

This material is a volatile essential oil dominated by monoterpene alcohols, especially linalool, with smaller amounts of alpha-terpineol and related terpenes. It is usually used at low fragrance levels, often well below 1% in leave-on products, and needs protection from air and light because oxidized terpene byproducts can increase sensitization potential.

Last updated 2026-05-14