I keep getting these ads on my Facebook feed for Boom products by Cindy Joseph. The ads target women of a certain age, and I suppose I fit the demographics regardless of how I feel about that fact.
When I first looked at the Boom website a month or so ago, I was tempted to buy their moisturizer since I was anticipating winter weather and how my skin shrivels up in the low humidity. Once I saw the prices, my cheapskate self began to balk at treating myself to this little indulgence. I unearthed the ingredients lists tonight and my penny-pinching self is now stubbornly refusing to loosen the purse strings.
I make a premium lip balm with beeswax from my own bees, high-oleic sunflower oil from Wisconsin that I infuse with homegrown calendula petals, and jojoba. I imagine it is probably every bit as nice as the Boomstick moisturizer. My beeswax naturally contains propolis and pollen, although from the plebian cornfields of Iowa, not the lush tropical forests of Hawaii. I'm sure this humble Midwestern provenance weakens this as a selling point, but I'm okay with that. I think I can safely omit the honey and then I don't have to worry about using a preservative.
I even already have some 0.5 ounce lip-balm type tubes and a few oval mini deodorant containers on hand. With a nice label, I'm all set for making a Boom-type moisturizer, DeeAnna style.
My "why buy it if you can make it better" mother would be proud of me.
When I first looked at the Boom website a month or so ago, I was tempted to buy their moisturizer since I was anticipating winter weather and how my skin shrivels up in the low humidity. Once I saw the prices, my cheapskate self began to balk at treating myself to this little indulgence. I unearthed the ingredients lists tonight and my penny-pinching self is now stubbornly refusing to loosen the purse strings.
The "Boomsilk" product is a white cream touted as a general purpose face and body moisturizer. Price ranges from about $8 to $15 per ounce. Ingredients: Purified water, organic extra virgin olive oil, beeswax with propolis and pollen, raw Pupekea wildflower honey, and d-alpha Vit E. https://www.boombycindyjoseph.com/products/boomsilk-product#
There's a related product "Boomstick" that is the same moisturizer without water in a firmer stick form. A whopping $28 for 7 grams (about 1/4 ounce). Ingredients: Organic extra virgin olive oil, beeswax with propolis and pollen, and raw Pupukea wildflower honey. https://www.boombycindyjoseph.com/products/boomstick-glo#
There's a related product "Boomstick" that is the same moisturizer without water in a firmer stick form. A whopping $28 for 7 grams (about 1/4 ounce). Ingredients: Organic extra virgin olive oil, beeswax with propolis and pollen, and raw Pupukea wildflower honey. https://www.boombycindyjoseph.com/products/boomstick-glo#
I make a premium lip balm with beeswax from my own bees, high-oleic sunflower oil from Wisconsin that I infuse with homegrown calendula petals, and jojoba. I imagine it is probably every bit as nice as the Boomstick moisturizer. My beeswax naturally contains propolis and pollen, although from the plebian cornfields of Iowa, not the lush tropical forests of Hawaii. I'm sure this humble Midwestern provenance weakens this as a selling point, but I'm okay with that. I think I can safely omit the honey and then I don't have to worry about using a preservative.
I even already have some 0.5 ounce lip-balm type tubes and a few oval mini deodorant containers on hand. With a nice label, I'm all set for making a Boom-type moisturizer, DeeAnna style.
My "why buy it if you can make it better" mother would be proud of me.