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Question about shelf life of raw materials
The question of shelf
life bothers me as often as I go through my ingredients. I know that the best
approach is to reach out to the supplier and get a technical data sheet. But, I
am a hobbyist. It means that I get my ingredients from repackers such as Lotion
Crafter, Makingcosmetics and such.The fact that formulating
is my obsession doesn’t help. I currently have close to 200 ingredients (not
including pigments) which I proudly collected from all over the globe. I buy small
amounts but they still expire. I must make a caveat when it comes to
preservatives, I only get them from the US and one reliable place in Italy, I store
them in the fridge I obtain all technical data.But what about other
ingredients? May I please ask you to share your general knowledge on what to consider
when it comes to shelf lives?For example:
Powders have longer shelf
life than liquids (which I assume means that I should rather get 99% glycolic
acid rather than 70% and 100% sodium lactate rather than 60%)Synthetic ingredients often
have a longer life than plant extractsSaturated fats live
longer than polyunsaturated (I don’t use a lot of triglyceride based oils but I
lookup molecular structure to check for double carbon bonds)Double bonds in the benzene
ring are relatively stable (alkyl benzoate)Anticipating professional
forum members saying that those all are gross generalisations, I want to
encourage my fellow hobbyist to remember that there is no one size fits all and
it’s better to ask a supplier. But general rules would be great to know.Thank you!
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