Wildharvested He Shou Wu Extract

TL;DR. This ingredient is used as a botanical conditioning and antioxidant extract, most often in hair and scalp products and sometimes in skin care. It supports product storytelling while adding plant polyphenols that can help limit oxidation in the formula or on the surface of skin and hair.

What does Wildharvested He Shou Wu Extract do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used as a botanical conditioning and antioxidant extract, most often in hair and scalp products and sometimes in skin care. It supports product storytelling while adding plant polyphenols that can help limit oxidation in the formula or on the surface of skin and hair.

Is Wildharvested He Shou Wu Extract clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is usually acceptable when supplier documentation confirms identity, extraction solvent, preservative system, and contaminant testing. The main friction points are botanical variability, possible sensitivity in reactive users, and the need to separate cosmetic use from oral-use safety concerns.

Is Wildharvested He Shou Wu Extract sustainable?

This material is plant-derived, but wild harvesting makes traceability and regeneration controls important. Its sustainability profile depends on verified collection practices, habitat pressure, solvent choice, and whether the extract is standardized without heavy processing.

Is Wildharvested He Shou Wu Extract COSMOS-approved?

It can be permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when sourced and processed according to the standard, especially with approved solvents such as water, ethanol, glycerin, or vegetable oil. It aligns best with Green Chemistry when it uses renewable plant feedstock, low-residue extraction, and biodegradable carrier systems.

How does Wildharvested He Shou Wu Extract work chemically?

This ingredient is a complex botanical mixture that can include stilbene glycosides, anthraquinone derivatives, tannins, flavonoids, sugars, and mineral salts depending on plant part and extraction method. Typical use is often below 5% as supplied extract, with stability driven by the carrier, pH, preservative system, light exposure, and control of oxidation-sensitive polyphenols.

Last updated 2026-05-16