Guest guest Posted April 5, 2006 Report Share Posted April 5, 2006 Will it not be untrue to call my perfume all-natural > if I mix Ambroxan to my formula? I see Ambroxan termed > as a chemical ingredient everywhere. Please explain. > > Thank you. > > Reba Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2006 Report Share Posted April 6, 2006 > > Will it not be untrue to call my perfume all-natural > > if I mix Ambroxan to my formula? I see Ambroxan termed > > as a chemical ingredient everywhere. Please explain. > > > > Thank you. > > > > Reba > Ambroxan is produced by in vitro synthesis. It is therefore an evil synthetic and cannot be used in a natural perfume. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2006 Report Share Posted April 6, 2006 In , " Campen " <dcampen@...> wrote > Ambroxan is produced by in vitro synthesis. It is therefore an evil > synthetic and cannot be used in a natural perfume. > Ambroxan is produced by biosynthisis, similar to penicillin or wine or alcohol. But I don't choose to argue whether that is kosher with some of you or not. I'm sure you're all different. Each much be his own judge. Also remember that every essential oil can be defined by a " chemical " name or hundreds of them. Neroli, e.g. consists of hundreds of those nasty things called chemicals, each of which has a distinctive chemical name, some of them very LONG. Sometime maybe you'd like to see the chemical breakdown of natural angelica root oil figured out by mass spectroscopy. That would curl your hair. I can publish it for you if you like. Hi, I would be very curious to see this list if you wouldn't mind taking the time to post it. I've been appreciating learning how to identify the natural isolates from the ehemical synthetics. Thanks in advance. Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2006 Report Share Posted April 6, 2006 At 01:53 PM 4/6/2006, you wrote: > > > > > Will it not be untrue to call my perfume all-natural > > > if I mix Ambroxan to my formula? I see Ambroxan termed > > > as a chemical ingredient everywhere. Please explain. > > > > > > Thank you. > > > > > > Reba > > >Ambroxan is produced by in vitro synthesis. It is therefore an evil >synthetic and cannot be used in a natural perfume. , could you please tell us more about this? <sticking to oils, concretes, absolutes, etc., myself ;-) > Anya http://.com The premier site on the Web to discover the beauty of Natural Perfume / Join to study natural perfumery Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2006 Report Share Posted April 6, 2006 At 02:56 PM 4/6/2006, you wrote: >In , " Campen " <dcampen@...> >wrote > > Ambroxan is produced by in vitro synthesis. It is therefore an evil > > synthetic and cannot be used in a natural perfume. > > > >Ambroxan is produced by biosynthisis, similar to penicillin or wine or >alcohol. But I don't >choose to argue whether that is kosher with some of you or not. I'm sure >you're all >different. Each much be his own judge. Don't let yourself be swayed by >others' zeal. Make >your individual peace with it. Also remember that every essential oil can >be defined by a > " chemical " name or hundreds of them. Neroli, e.g. consists of hundreds of >those nasty >things called chemicals, each of which has a distinctive chemical name, >some of them very >LONG. Sometime maybe you'd like to see the chemical breakdown of natural >angelica root >oil figured out by mass spectroscopy. That would curl your hair. I can >publish it for you if >you like. That would be good info to upload to our Files section. BTW, my hair doesn't need to be any curlier, thank you! LOL PS Mike, you might want to tone done the pedantic attitude a notch -- we're not all dummies here who have never seen the chemical breakdown of a GC/MS before. Anya http://.com The premier site on the Web to discover the beauty of Natural Perfume / Join to study natural perfumery Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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