We all have so much to do that taking care of our skin can be a tricky business. I wash my face every morning, and again at night if I wear makeup, like this DIY blush. There are times when I’m out of the house and I just feel messy and need to freshen up. Disposable facial wipes are convenient, but they can be expensive, aren’t eco-friendly, and are usually full of ingredients I’d rather avoid.
Toxic Ingredients In Facial Wipes
The popular Burt’s Bees brand is more natural, but not much better. It will cost you about $3 for just 10 cloths and contains iffy ingredients. One ingredient is phenoxyethanol, which is classified as a skin irritant and toxic to your bodies organs. Why wash your face with a skin irritant?!
Benzyl alcohol is another common ingredient in many popular wipes. This alcohol is classified as a moderate risk and immunotoxin and limited to low exposure for workers handling the product. Of course though the FDA has approved it for use in food, which makes perfect sense (not).
So what’s the solution? Make your own, portable and easily used cleansing cloths! Below is an easy DIY project that has so many uses. These can be kept in a wide mouth, screw top container like a mason jar, or a repurposed cosmetic jar and easily thrown in your bag.
How to Make Facial Wipes For Cleansing and Makeup Removal
You Will Need:
- Flannel fabric
- Sewing machine or needle and thread
- Scissors
- Wide mouth lidded jar
- Marker
- Pins
1. Fold your fabric in half. Starting at the end farthest from the middle crease, lay the lid down on your fabric and trace around it with the marker. Don’t worry about the marks as they won’t show once the project is done. Make as many as you want, keeping them closely spaced to save on fabric. Cut out all the pieces
2. Turn all the fabric pieces so that the patterned/colored side is on the inside. Line up the edges and place 1-3 straight pins in the center to hold the pieces together.
3. Using your sewing machine or hand needle, sew around the edge leaving about 1/4 inch of fabric on the outside rim. Do NOT sew all the way around but leave about a 1.5 inch opening.
4. Remove the pins and turn the fabric right side out. Use your finger or the eraser side of a pencil to make sure the fabric is pushed back and the largest space inside possible is created. There will be an unsightly gap.
5. Fold the edges of the unsewn fabric under and towards the center of the cloth. Starting at the unsewn area, sew around the edges of the fabric about 1/4 inch in. Be sure you don’t sew too far towards the center otherwise the gap fabric won’t be secured.
Facial Wipes Solution Recipes
Now that you have your wipes you need something to wet them with! This solution could be put directly on a stack of wipes in their storage container, or kept in a small squirt bottle. The recipes below contain natural essential oils with antiviral and antifungal properties so the wipes should stay fresh for a week when stored with the solution out of heat. Depending on how many wipes you have you may want to cut the recipes in half.
For acne prone skin use:
- 3-5 drops Tea tree essential oil
- 2 teaspoons Grapeseed oil
- 3-5 drops lavender essential oil
- 4 oz witch hazel
For normal to dry skin use:
- 5 drops vitamin E oil
- 2-4 drops Rosemary essential oil
- 2-4 drops Sandalwood essential oil
- 2 Teaspoons Olive or Sweet almond oil
- 4 oz witch hazel or flower hydrosol (rose and lavender are my favorites!)
- Thoroughly combine all ingredients, then pour solution onto wipes.
- To keep the wipes fresh, toss them in the laundry when done and wash like anything else.
I reblogged this! Hope you don’t mind. Didn’t want to lose it. How do I follow you on blogspot.com?
Hi Betty! I’m glad you enjoyed it. I’m not sure what you mean by “reblogging” it. I’m okay with mentioning the post and providing a link, but no more than the first paragraph or two of text followed by a link. To follow me on BlogSpot simply log into your account and enter the html of my blog into the “add blog” section of blogs you follow. It’s on the left of the page. Hope that helps!
Hi Jamie,
i love your DIY facial recipes. These sound so natural and healthy, I only use DIY on my skin and I am going to give thees a try. hanks for sharing on Real Food Fridays. Pinned & tweeted!
Willthese actually remove mascara?
Hi Sue, the cloths themselves will, depending on what solution you use them with. If you’re using a waterproof mascara then that would be trickier to remove and I’m not sure what would work best for that since I don’t use waterproof.
Oh I have to try this! Looks easy to do and I would know to clean my face in a healthy way 😉 Thanks for sharing at my craft party! I pinned and shared your post! Would love for you to link back to my blog!!
What a wonderful DIY alternative to expensive conventional cleaning cloths that are full of harmful ingredients. Thanks for sharing your homemade facial cleaning cloths with us at the Healthy Happy Green & Natural Party. I’m pinning and sharing.
What a great tutorial! I love DIY stuff like this. Thank you so much for sharing it at Savoring Saturdays. 🙂
I have an acne prone skin and ieant to try the recipe but witch hazel isnt affordable where i live can we replace it by something else ? Thank you for the efforts i cant wait to try out the Dit 🙂
Apple cider vinegar would work very well for clearing up acne, and the smell would dissipate after a bit after it’s been applied to the skin. I’d probably use 1-2 Tbsp of the vinegar and do 2-3 Tbsp of distilled water
Hey! Love this post. I was wondering if anyone has unlocked a recipe for a DIY version of Olay’s water activated cleansing cloths? I CANNOT figure it out, but I think they’d be helpful for when I travel (which is a lot). I don’t typically like to use disposable wipes, but the reusable ones are a major pain to travel with for me. What are your thoughts?
The first ingredient on the Olay wipes is petroleum (yikes!) and then there’s a lot of cleansers, preservatives and glycerin. I don’t think it would be very easy (or maybe even possible) to create a natural copy of these since the main ingredient is petroleum. You could maybe use disposable cloths, soak them in a solution, and then take them in a waterproof Ziploc bag to avoid the hassle of reusable ones while travelling. I’ve used viva brand paper towels for diaper wipes before, so they’d probably work well for disposable makeup wipes too.