Saturday, 13 October 2012

Home made beauty aids


To keep your hair healthy and luxuriant, the scalp should be regularly rubbed once a week with warm oil. There are many oils that can be used for this purpose—amla, mustard, coconut. Soap-nut powders or arethas are wonderful for washing the hair, as they make the hair glossy. Washing the hair with ‘curds’ is also a tried and tested ancient recipe for beautiful hair. Vinegar and lemon juice are splendid rinses for the hair, after a wash. They impart a soft, glossy sheen.

The habit of beautifying the eyes with surma and kajol is another practice that has stood the test of time. It was practised in ancient days and continues to this day. Kajal is easily made at home. It is simple lamp black, which is collected on a plate held over an oil-lamp. Castor is used in the oil-lamp, and the lamp black, dissolved in castor oil, is then applied to the eyes.

 Surma is a preparation of antimony pounded to a paste in rose-water. A silver or zinc slide is dipped into it and passed along the rims of the eye-lids, lightly but firmly, to make the eyes appear larger, luminous and exquisitely shaped. Skillfully applied kajal or surma can beautify the eyes almost as well as the modern eyebrow pencils and eye-shadows.

Pimples and acne are often due to impurities in the blood, and cutting out fried foods and sugar and eating more raw fruits and vegetables, skimmed milk and curds, will help. Neem-tree leaves can make an excellent blood purifier. Crush neem leaves in water, strain and drink a tablespoon daily. 

The juice of a lemon in a glass of hot water drunk first thing in the morning is indispensable for people on a reducing diet. But it should not be confined to dieters alone, for lemon juice, in hot or cold water, is excellent for the system and the complexion.

 The price of good cosmetics today is prohibitive and not all of us can afford them. Why not utilize some of the old and proven beauty aids, so easily available in one’s own home.

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