Hello,
I am new hear and if this question has already been answered sorry for the repeat but I could not find it anywhere on the forum. I am completely new to the cosmetic chemist arena. I am looking to work with someone to advise us on our formulations we have.
I have a benchmark product and have produced a few samples but I don't know enough to say how good my formula is. As in being preserved and not using to much active ingredients. I also would like to get some advice on, if I am measuring correctly and how to scale the formula. So I am looking to hire someone for a consultation to look over my formulas and give me there expert advise along with answering a few questions.
My question for the group is I want to make the product with no synthetics does it matter what type of chemist I work with? Also does anyone have a price range I could expect to pay for 1-2 hours of consulting. Thanks
Comments
As your line grows, you will see that your definition of these terms and concepts will mature. I generally urge my clients to acquaint themselves with their regional Natural Standards (NSF, COSMOS, etc.) and to use this as a yardstick for your raw material selection. You will find that there is by far way too much misinformation and "fear mongering." Others will argue "this is what the market wants." Perhaps in 2005 this was still true, but the core clientele now wants a balance between compliance with a Natural Standard, Price and Performance. To put all the emphasis on being "natural" is naive and outdated.
I would definitely use a Consultant. Cosmetic Science is not as simplistic as many neophytes will at first believe. Also, in this Industry you can be a Chemist or a Marketer. In an effective line you will quickly see that you can't effectively do both. So hire a Chemist to match your well written Product Definition/Standard, let them do their job, do an about face and realize that you are already behind in the marketing. DO NOT TRY TO LEARN FORMULATING OVER THE INTERNET!
That was more addressed to some of the posters we see occasionally who minimize the importance of training and experience. You know the ones "I am not a Chemist and my background is in banking. I want to make a "insert difficult or OTC product here."" On one hand I know that the Internet has facilitated training, but on the other hand to minimize or ignore your limitations is dangerous and minimizes the values of others. My 2 cents. I will get off my soapbox.
http://www.cosmeticlearning.com/
See website for details www.desertinbloomcosmeticslab.com