Wildcrafted Simmondsia Chinensis Oil

TL;DR. This ingredient primarily functions as an emollient and skin-conditioning agent, adding slip, softness, and a light protective feel without acting like a heavy occlusive. It is also used in hair care to improve combability and reduce dry-feeling texture.

What does Wildcrafted Simmondsia Chinensis Oil do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient primarily functions as an emollient and skin-conditioning agent, adding slip, softness, and a light protective feel without acting like a heavy occlusive. It is also used in hair care to improve combability and reduce dry-feeling texture.

Is Wildcrafted Simmondsia Chinensis Oil clean?

It is broadly accepted in clean-beauty frameworks and is generally well tolerated, with low irritation and sensitization potential when properly refined. The main quality checks are freshness, oxidation markers, and botanical traceability rather than restricted-list friction.

Is Wildcrafted Simmondsia Chinensis Oil sustainable?

This material is a renewable botanical input and is generally biodegradable, with a lower persistence profile than many synthetic film-forming emollients. Wild collection makes traceability, habitat management, and fair harvesting practices the key sustainability checks.

Is Wildcrafted Simmondsia Chinensis Oil COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and can align with COSMOS-organic when the wild-harvested source and processing meet certification requirements. It fits Green Chemistry principles well because it is plant-derived, typically mechanically extracted, biodegradable, and does not require aggressive chemistry to function.

How does Wildcrafted Simmondsia Chinensis Oil work chemically?

Chemically, it is composed mainly of long-chain monoesters rather than triglycerides, which helps explain its high oxidative stability and dry, cushiony skin feel. It is typically used from about 1% to 10% in emulsions and higher in anhydrous blends, and it is stable across normal cosmetic pH ranges because it is used as an oil-phase material rather than a pH-active ingredient.

Last updated 2026-05-16