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Top » Catalog » AROMATHERAPY » CARRIER OILS » Calendula silvestre  
Best Sellers in this Category
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Sweet Almond, Grapeseed, Peach Kernel, Apricot Kernel all at £6 for 1 litre
Calendula Kernel Carrier Oil
Calendula silvestre
 
Calendula oil is renowned for its calming and soothing properties on the skin and helps fight excess oil. Use blended in massage oils
£4.10

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DescriptionInfused Marigold flowers in Sunflower


Suitability

Calendula oil is renowned for its calming and soothing properties on the skin and helps to fight excess oil.

Calendula can be used alone, but is best added to other carrier oils such as Grapeseed or Sweet Almond, we recommend at a ratio of around 10 - 20% depending upon the desired effect.


Natural Contents

Vitamin A Vitamin B1 Vitamin B2, Vitamin B6 Vitamin E (small amount), Salicilyic Acid

 

Botanical Name
Calendula silvestre (infused in Helianthus Annuus)

Origin
UK

Extraction
Infusion

Shelf life
6 - 9 months

Specifications
Color- Pale yellow to clear
Odor- Bland
Free Fatty Acids- 0.07%
Peroxide Value- 0.46
Non-Saponifiables-
Saponification Value- 186
Iodine Value- 88
Specific Gravity- 0.93
Refractive Index - 1.55
pH- 4.08

Fatty Acids
Linoleic- 16.29%

Oleic- 74.48%
Palmitic- 4.38%

Stearic- 2.16%   

 
Calendula Carrier Oil
Sweet Almond MSDS Information Click here for full MSDS information on Calendula Oil
Essential Oil Informaion and General Safety Click here for General Safety Information when using essential oils
 
Understanding Carrier Oils, uses and their extraction

All of the oils we stock are processed by distinct and various methods. The information below will help you better understand not only our line of oils, but also the entire industry of oils and their methods of extraction. When we select our carrier oils, we take into account a series of criteria: The best quality for use on skin & massage, cost, reputability and ethicality. Many will say cold pressed is always the best way of producing a carrier oil, but this is simply not true. Certain oils (i.e. Sweet Almond) are truly unusable in their cold pressed form. They are pungent, contain bits which would irritate when using in a massage and have very short lives. Some companies will claim their oils are "cold pressed", when really they are Expeller Pressed (its a bit of creative license where there is a slight overlap). We believe in being fully up front, and when we do not choose cold pressed as our primary source... there is always a very good reason. The following explains the different extraction methods.

Cold Pressed

A method of mechanical extraction where heat is reduced and minimized throughout the batching of the raw material. This helps the oil maintain its original state, constituents, and depth. Temperatures are rigorously controlled to ensure that it does not exceed 80-90 degrees Fahrenheit. Although not a practical method of extraction for all vegetable oils on the market it is highly regarded as the extraction method of choice.

Expeller Pressed

A method of natural, mechanical extraction and processing of oils where a small amount of heat is produced simply through the frictional heat created by hydraulic presses. This is usually around 120-200 degrees Fahrenheit and makes the oil suitable and economical as a base for cosmetics because of its fairly undisturbed molecular state. It also makes a fine food grade oil.

Refined

A fully processed oil where it has been exposed to all methods of refinement including a flash fluctuation in temperature as high as 450 degrees and winterization as low as -30 degrees, deodorization, which removes the heavy and often unsettling odor in oil, and finally bleaching, where natural clays and other mediums are used to alter or remove an oils color, and scent. This makes for an economical oil in cosmetics and body care products, but it is not the healthiest as a food grade oil.

Partially Refined

A process where only some of the methods available are employed to produce a manufactured oil. Only one or two of the three available methods are used in a partially refined oil. These include, but are not limited to; deodorization, winterization and natural bleaching. These methods are used for oils which have been known historically to go rancid quickly, and they are also used to further stabilize an oil or remove its heavy odor and deep color.

Unrefined

A process of mechanical extraction and screen filtering where no additional refining process has taken place. This ensures the finest quality product and makes the oil the most exquisite for food and cosmetic preparation. The unrefined process helps oil retain a rich, strong flavor and color that is true to its natural state. Unrefined oils are always darker in color and richer in scent.

 

Naturallythinking
7 High Street, Carshalton, Surrey, SM5 3AP. England
Tel: 020 8773 3803

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