Vegetable Oil/Olus/Huile végétale

TL;DR. This ingredient functions primarily as an emollient lipid, softening skin and reducing moisture loss by supporting the product’s lipid phase. It can also act as a carrier for lipophilic actives, pigments, and fragrance components.

What does Vegetable Oil/Olus/Huile végétale do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient functions primarily as an emollient lipid, softening skin and reducing moisture loss by supporting the product’s lipid phase. It can also act as a carrier for lipophilic actives, pigments, and fragrance components.

Is Vegetable Oil/Olus/Huile végétale clean?

This ingredient is generally well-tolerated and not a common restricted-list concern in clean beauty frameworks. The main quality questions are exact source, refining method, oxidation control, and potential residual allergenic proteins depending on the crop origin.

Is Vegetable Oil/Olus/Huile végétale sustainable?

This material is sourced from cultivated renewable feedstocks, but its footprint depends heavily on crop type, land use, irrigation, and traceability. It is typically readily biodegradable, with lower persistence concerns than many synthetic film-forming lipids.

Is Vegetable Oil/Olus/Huile végétale COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when the source and processing methods meet the standard. It aligns well with Green Chemistry when made from renewable feedstocks using mechanical extraction or compliant low-residue refining, with good biodegradability as a practical strength.

How does Vegetable Oil/Olus/Huile végétale work chemically?

This material is a mixture of triglycerides, with fatty acid saturation and unsaturation varying by crop source and refining grade. Typical use can range from 1 to 20% in creams and lotions, and much higher in balms or anhydrous formats, with oxidation controlled by antioxidants, air management, and opaque packaging.

Last updated 2026-05-13