Showing posts with label cold cream recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cold cream recipe. Show all posts

Monday, April 13, 2015

Granulated Cold Cream

Take:
 1 ounce white wax

  • 1 ounce spermaceti,
  • 3 oz almond oil
  • 3 oz otto of rose


Dissolve the wax and spermaceti in the almond oil, by means of heat, and when a little cool, pour the mixture into a large wedgwood mortar previously warmed, and containing about a pint of warm water. Stir briskly until the cream is well divided, add the otto, and suddenly pour the whole into a clean vessel containing 8 or 12 pints of cold water. Separate the cream by straining through muslin, and shake out as much water as possible.

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Petrolatum Cold Cream c1902


  • Petrolatum white 7 ozs 
  • Paraffin oz Lanolin 2 ozs 
  • Water 3 ozs 
  • Rose oil 3 drops 
  • Alcohol 1 dram 


A small quantity of borax may be if desirable and the perfume may varied to suit the taste of the and his customers. 

Friday, August 15, 2014

Victorian Cold Cream

Take:

  • 10 drachms of spermaceti
  • 4 drachms of white wax
  • half a pound of prepared lard
  • 15 grains of subcarbonate of potash
  • 4 ounces of rose-water,
  • 2 ounces of spirits of wine
  • ten drops of otto of roses


Proceed as above. Some persons prefer orange-flower-water instead of rose-water, in which case use the same proportions.

Cold cream is a useful local application to hard and dry parts of the skin, to abrasions and cracks. When
spread thickly upon rag, it is an excellent application to blistered surfaces or burns, or may be used to protect exposed parts from the influence of the sun.


Thursday, September 5, 2013

Georgian Cold Cream

Take:
  • 2 ounces of sweet oil of almonds
  • 3 drachms of white wax
  • 3 drachms of spermaceti
  • 2 ounces of rose-water
  • 1 drachm of oil of bergamot
  • 15 drops of oil of lavender
  • 15 drops of otto of roses
Melt the wax and spermaceti in the oil of almonds, by placing them together in a jar, which should be plunged into boiling water. Heat a mortar (which should, if possible, be marble) by pouring boiling water into it, and letting it remain there until the mortar is uniformly heated ; the water is to be poured away, and the mortar dried well. Pour the melted wax and spermaceti into the warm mortar, and add rose-water gradually, while the mixture is constantly stirred or whisked with an egg-whisp, until the whole is cold, and, when nearly finished, add the oils and otto of roses. In the absence of a mortar, a basin plunged into an other containing boiling water will answer the purpose.