Contact LisaLise

Please use the form on the right to contact LisaLise.

Majestic Court 5, St. Mary's Street
Mellieha
Malta

LisaLise offers online education of natural plant-based cosmetics via e-books and courses

LLBlogHEADER2020-3.gif

Shop Blog

A look inside the LisaLise natural cosmetics lab with free formulas, DIY how-to's, ingredients tips, sneak peeks, and more.

Quality for Quality

Lise

QualityIngredienst.jpg

Excellence can be achieved with few simple ingredients, but there’s a catch. The few simple ingredients have to be prime quality.

Knowing your ingredients is the first step.

What Calendula Adds to a Balm

Lise

SOOTHINESS.jpg

Here’s another ‘wordification’ from my Instagram feed: Soothiness

Calendula Officinalis has an amazing natural built-in power of soothiness that it happily imparts when infused into an oil and is added to a balm.

It has demonstrated this many times to me over the years, but science is also starting to catch up and has an increasing amount of documentation of the many traditional medicinal uses of calendula.

Want to learn more about what calendula has to offer? I’ve written about it on the main blog:

Extracting the Medicinal Powers of Calendula

Calendula, the Healing Flower

Infusion Straining Tip: Double Filter

Lise

LISALISEdoublefiltering.jpg

Pictured: a small batch of vanilla infused oil ready to strain on left and stacked filters on right. By using a tea filter (the small one) inside a coffee filter (the bigger one), you double up straining effect in one pass. This method is especially useful for vanilla-infused oil and has become my go-to method for small batch straining.

What to do with the vanilla after straining? Don’t discard it just yet! Add it to a coffee-in-oil infusion for a warm and extra rich dimension to the scent (and flavor). What to use the infused coffee oil for? Think naturally flavored lip balm.

You’re welcome.

Rose Exfoliating Paste Demonstration

Lise

A while back on the main blog, I shared how to make a rose exfoliating paste. To my delight, this method has drawn quite a bit of interest and questions, so I did a small film-demonstration of how this exfoliant looks and feels on the hands.

An exfoliating paste of this kind is an upcyling of spent material after an oil infusion. Despite being a kind of ‘re-use’ of used ingredients, if tired properly, the shelf life is about 6 months (depending on the oil you use to infuse with).

Here it is, and if you want to make this paste yourself, you’ll find the how-to right here on the main blog.

Suffering From Tincturitis and Making Up Words

Lise

LISALISEtincturitis-880.jpg

Above: the definition of Tincturitis: a condition I have ‘suffered’ from for quite a while and which continues to increase with no end in sight. (The pictured tincture is with fresh, wildcrafted cleavers).

My Instagram account has a few more posts with these ‘wordifications’.

Wordifications? That’s my term for making up words. This is another affliction I have had for years and something I have only relatively recently come to terms with. Making up words happens a lot while I am working (many botanical ingredients seem to want to chat and some can even be quite vocal about providing input and inspiration).

I have sometimes wondered if this kind of thing is more commonly found in people who speak more than one language. I will sometimes get ‘stuck’ between languages and suddenly a brand new term will present itself out of the blue.

If you are a word-maker-upper too, I’d love to hear what your thoughts are on the matter!

Find more wordification fun on my Instagram account.