Pearls
Home » Beauty & Style »Egg shampoo


Check the REAL WEIGHT LOSS SECRETS FOR FREE . Lose 20, 30, 40, 100 Pounds in 30-90 Days. Miracle Diet available free for immediate download .

Enter your full Email Address



Egg shampoo|Natural shampoo

Although a large number of Shampoo products are available in the market, they are either too expensive or too sub – standard. A sub standard product is harmful and a standard Shampoo products is  beyond the reach of people of ordinary income group.  If  prepared at home, you will get a pure product at a nominal cost. A couple of recipes for making Natural shampoo at home are given below :

  • Natural shampoo, Take bar of soap nuts (reetha), dry amla and shikakai in a quantity of fifty gram each. Grind them to a fine powder. Boil the powder for half an hour in 2 litres of water. Strain it when itgets cold, and fill it in a bottle.
  • For dyed hair, make Egg shampoo. Take the yolk (yellowpart) of two eggs, beat it and mix a little water in  it. Now, beat the white part and mix it with the beaten yolk. Wet your hair with lukewarm water and apply the shampoo. Wash your hair again with lukewarm water to apply the remaining shampoo.

Standing at the base of a lodgepole pine tree in North Vancouver, Anthony Gollner reaches in and up toward a bulbous growth that has spread around a branch just above his head. Poof. Spores from the tree explode all around him, leaving him covered in dark orange pollen.

Too polite to swear, he jumps back and swiftly brushes the powder from his head and jacket, then returns with renewed determination to that growth he covets.

Actually, it's not a growth. It's a pine-sap deposit that seeped from the innards of the tree, possibly to protect it from a wound or from over-production, and accumulated here. The wound has healed and Gollner sees his chance to scrape the hardened mass into his bucket. The tree's medicine, he says, is also medicine for human skin and hair problems.
Anthony Gollner goes into the woods to find sap from pine trees to make his all natural products.

Anthony Gollner goes into the woods to find sap from pine trees to make his all natural products.
Bill Keay, Vancouver Sun

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Gollner is president of Carina Organics, a mom, pop and son enterprise (Anthony is the son) that makes and sells natural hair, skin and pet products using plant materials gathered in B.C.'s own backyard.

The Gollners are part of a growing industry producing cosmetics from, if not fully organic, at least all-natural products, hoping to cash in on a growing population looking for alternatives to synthetic cosmetics.

Getting spore bombed is the cost of doing business, he says. Luckily, he's not allergic.

Pine, douglas fir, cedar and hemlock saps can do wonders for people suffering from eczema, psoriasis, cradle cap or dry skin, he says. First nations people knew this, he adds, long before his father Helmut discovered it while developing a tonic to ease the itchy scalps of his clients.

Helmut learned to make his own hair tonics while apprenticing to become a barber in Germany. But his real inspiration came from an old bar of pine-tar soap he found in a cupboard of his Vancouver barber shop while cleaning up. Now the Gollners have a whole line called Botanical Theraputics that use the essence of the tree saps in place of synthetic, chemical-based ingredients.

Shampoo is meant to remove dirt, sebum (a.k.a. oils), and product buildup from your hair. But there are dozens of different brands to choose from, and even more types within those brands. The same goes for conditioners. Conditioners are meant to add shine, protect hair from drying out and allow for easier combing. Here, we run down the best shampoos and conditioners for four different hair types.

Coarse, curly hair Curly hair is almost always dry hair and here’s why: Oils produced in the scalp don’t travel as easily down the hair shaft as they do with straight hair. We've found creamy, moisturizing shampoos work best for this hair texture. Look for wheat germ oil, shea butter and nut oils (macadamia, for example) in your shampoos. These tend to coat the hair shaft, trapping water inside.

Conditioners: More than any other hair type, women with coarse, curly hair must condition every time they shampoo. Look for an ultra-moisturizing conditioner made especially for coarse hair. Once a month use a hot oil treatment. For extra-dry hair, use an intense moisturizing treatment every 2 weeks.

Health , beauty therapies, weight loss packages, skin care and hair loss preventive treatments – all under One roof – Shed extra flab and get the perfect fitness and start looking fantastic – why to struggle for years ?

Contact us on the following Nos to avail more information :
0091-98424-30308/98422-26662/99425-87000

Our Email id:
generalbooking@gmail.com, info@womenhealthandbeauty.com

Contact : 0091-98424-30308/98422-26662/99425-87000   Email:  info@womenhealthandbeauty.com