Herbal DIY Face Oil

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Wellness Mama » Blog » Beauty » Herbal DIY Face Oil

There are plenty of retinol creams and conventional skincare products promising greater skin. But these often contain ingredients I don’t want on my face or in my body. This DIY herbal face oil features skin soothing and anti-aging ingredients for amazing skin. 

I was blessed with the naturally oily skin that many of my relatives have. It was a tremendous pain in the teenage years, but I say “blessed” because everyone in the family with that skin type has aged incredibly well. In fact, it has only been recently after 6 kids and much stress that I have ever experienced dry skin or the beginnings of wrinkles.

Many of my friends are turning to botox (which kind of blows my mind because they look great without it). But not being one to spend money to inject “the bacterial toxin botulin” into my face shudder I wanted to find a natural way to ward off wrinkles.

DIY Face Oil

This herbal face oil is amazing for skin. It’s somewhat expensive to make, although I’m guessing it’s still cheaper than injecting botulin. It smells incredible and works even better.

I only need a tiny drop each day, so my small bottle should last about 6-8 months. And it’s the only face moisturizer I need. It took me a while to find my perfect skincare routine, but so far I’m really happy with this facial oil. If you want glowing skin, hydration, and natural active ingredients, then give it a try!

Herbal Face Oil Ingredients

These are the ingredients I used in my anti-aging face oil.

Best Face Oil Ingredients

The special blend of oils in this recipe is especially good for skin. Another great thing about this recipe is that it takes seconds to make. We’re just mixing oils with other oils and no water or emulsification is needed. Here’s a breakdown of the ingredients and why they’re so good for you.

Argan Oil

Traditionally argan kernels were harvested from the poo of the goats munching on the argan fruit. Lucky for you there are more modern methods of harvesting! This liquid gold is great for problem skin or to generally nourish the skin. It seals moisture into the skin and protects against sun and wind damage.

Argan oil is also light and easily absorbs deep into skin. You’ll find vitamin E, antioxidant polyphenols, squalane, and carotenes. It calms inflammation, fights free radicals, and helps us age gracefully.

If your skin is on the drier side, then a heavier carrier oil may work better. Pure olive oil, avocado oil, or baobab oil are all good options here. There are lots of different options for aging or mature skin, just use what best fits your needs. You can even mix and match and use a blend of several carrier oils if preferred.

Olive Oil

While it tastes great drizzled over salad, olive oil is often a go-to for skincare. This oil is a major source of squalane, a lipid our skin cells make. Olive moisturizes and soothes damaged skin and acts as a humectant to protect the skin’s barrier.

Avocado Oil 

This nutrient-rich oil with vitamins A, B, and E is a popular choice for skincare. It replenishes the skin’s collagen to help prevent age spots, and soothe inflammation. It’s firming and improves skin tone. It’s also great for softening scaly skin. Avocado oil is pressed from the fleshy fruit, while avocado seed oil comes from the seed (and isn’t so tasty). Both are good for skincare.

Baobab Oil

Improves elasticity and supports collagen health. This oil soothes damaged skin and also helps with breakouts, acne-prone skin, and rosacea. It regenerates, moisturizes, and softens skin. It has a blend of fatty acids, primarily oleic and linoleic fatty acids.

Rosehip Seed Oil

I like adding vitamin C-rich cold pressed rosehip oil to anti-aging skincare products. It’s one of the only drying oils which makes it good for oily skin. Even if you have dry skin or combination skin, it works beautifully in any anti-aging blend. You only need to add a tiny amount in with another carrier oil. You can find it in my rosehip seed oil facial moisturizer here.

Evening Primrose Oil 

High in GLA fatty acids, evening primrose is great for eczema. GLA also reduces inflammation and supports healthy hormone balance. I wouldn’t necessarily use this carrier oil by itself, but it works well mixed with another oil like olive, jojoba, or argan. It’s a little heavier and too much may clog pores. Some dermatologists recommend not using it on very oily or acne-prone skin. 

The Best Essential Oils for Face Oil

There are tons of good botanicals out there, but a few essential oils really stand out when it comes to skincare.

If you’re looking for a natural, anti-aging, and skin smoothing serum or face oil, then give this a try! It’s brightening, good for sensitive skin and dryness, and leaves skin feeling amazing. While these are more expensive oils, they last a long time when diluted. And I use them in other recipes to get the most out of my purchase.

  • Rose – Not only does rose soothe the heart in times of grief, but it soothes damaged skin too.
  • Frankincense – I include this essential oil in my gold, frankincense, and myrrh lotion bars. It’s great for scars, stretch marks, and irritated skin. Studies have looked at frankincense’s ability to soothe inflammation and repair damaged skin. In a 2010 trial, frankincense extract significantly improved skin smoothness and fine lines in women with photoaging.
  • Myrrh – A very thick oil that’s distilled from myrrh resin and has an earthy smell. It’s been used in wound care for centuries. Myrrh is naturally antifungal, antibacterial, and anti-inflammatory. Scientists continue to explore its use in infection and wound care, like sepsis cases.
  • Lavender – The most economical of the bunch, lavender is one of the world’s most popular essential oils. It’s calming and soothing and helps to repair damaged skin. It’s antibacterial, good for acne, oily skin, and just damaged skin in general.

How to Use Face Oil

I keep this by my bathroom sink and use a drop after my oil cleansing routine at night. Sometimes I’ll use it after washing my face with honey in the morning. It smells incredible and I love smelling the essential oils as I drift off to sleep or work in the morning.

Since I use oil cleansing and my face is already somewhat moisturized before applying this I can use 1-2 drops. If you’re using a soap based face wash, those dry skin out more so you’ll probably need to apply more face oil than me.

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4.50 from 4 votes

Herbal DIY Face Oil

This soothing and brightening face oil can be customized to your skin type. Use a few drops after cleansing or toning for it's anti-aging effects.
Prep Time2 minutes
Yield: 2 ounces
Author: Katie Wells

Materials

Instructions

  • Add the essential oils to the bottle.
  • Add the carrier oil(s) to the bottle until it's almost full. Be sure to leave room for the dropper or pump lid!
  • Shake well to combine.

Notes

Storage: Keep in a cool, dark place away from direct light and heat.
Shelf life: The oils will go rancid after about 6-18 months. The face oil will last as long as the shelf life of the carrier oil used. 

This article was medically reviewed by Madiha Saeed, MD, a board certified family physician. As always, this is not personal medical advice and we recommend that you talk with your doctor.

What do you use on your face? Leave us a comment and let us know!

 

Sources
  1. Han, X., Rodriguez, D., & Parker, T. L. (2017). Biological activities of frankincense essential oil in human dermal fibroblasts. Biochimie open, 4, 31–35. 
  2. Kim, M. S., et al. (2012). Myrrh inhibits LPS-induced inflammatory response and protects from cecal ligation and puncture-induced sepsis. Evidence-based complementary and alternative medicine : eCAM2012, 278718. 
  3. Parker, S. (2014). Power of the Seed. Process Media.
  4. Robbins, W. (n.d.) Essential Oils Directory: Essential Oil Properties, Uses and Benefits. Aromaweb
  5. Rudd, M. (2022, Feb 8). Evening Primrose Oil for Skin: Benefits and How to Use. Byrdie

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

153 responses to “Herbal DIY Face Oil”

  1. Cindy Avatar

    Hi! I love your site and I follow it regularly. I came across this post and I felt I had to comment. I love essential oils! Due to my own auto immune disease, I have been leaning to all natural products and have been consistently adding oils into my life routines. However, I find myself today recovering from one of the worse allergic reactions I have ever had.

    About 3 months ago, I started with a homemade facial routine, where I incorporated Frankincense oil. My face and neck developed a severe case of Allergen contact dermatitis. It was painful, swollen till my eyes were shut and itchier than anything I’ve experienced. At this point is taking almost a week to heal after having stopped using the frankincense oil. After this happened, I immediately started researching frankincense oil. Through my research, I have discovered that this oil is particularly known for this type of reaction. Therefore, I just want to let those of you know, who tend to be sensitive to allergies. (I do tend to be very sensitive to many things from pharmaceuticals, to many things found in nature).

    I’m sad about it too. Frankincense is definitely one of my favorite oils. However, I just cannot use it topically. I may try it again after time, on the bottom of my feet, but never neat and never again on my face. Although, then again, I may not ever try again, given the circumstances.

    Just thought I would share my experience.

  2. Wendy Nightingale Avatar
    Wendy Nightingale

    Have used your facial oil recipe before, and liked it! I also am a great believer in only putting natural stuff on my skin!

  3. Melinda Avatar

    love your recipes. I’m new to this. how much do you convert 2 oz coconut oil into cups? or is that tsp or tbsp.?

  4. Chalisa Avatar

    Hi Katie,

    I would love to try this recipe but I live in a hot and humid country. Is it possible to use this recipe but in a cream or lotion form? If yes, then what ingredient would you suggest I add?

    Thanks,
    CK

  5. Andrea Avatar

    Where would this fit into my skin care routine?? After my moisturizer and serums?

  6. Tamara Rogers Avatar
    Tamara Rogers

    Will this recipe work for getting rid of sun spots/age spots? Anything else you would recommend for sun spots?

    Thanks,
    Tamara

  7. Jamie Avatar

    I would like to comment on the safety of your blend. For daily use it should be only 12 drops TOTAL for 2oz of carrier oil. This would be a 1% dilution. Your dilution is almost 4%! This is going to be more like a chemical wash on your face if you use it daily. There are some great websites that teach about essential oil safety. I would recommend learning a bit more before posting such recipes. As for my credentials: I am finishing up my aromatherapy certification via aromahead.com. Thank you.

  8. Morgan Avatar
    Morgan

    Do we have to use all the oils? If we substitute some of the oils for other essential oils that work topically, would it have a different effect? I was just wondering because some of the essential oils are really pricey.

  9. Veronica Avatar
    Veronica

    I’ve read your recipe but you do not mention the size of bottle you use? how many ml is the bottle 5, 10, etc….

  10. Kirsten Avatar
    Kirsten

    I found your site while researching essential oils, as there are so many companies to buy from. I suffer from mild cystic acne and am looking for a more natural cure. I thought essential oils could possibly help, as I’ve read Frankincense is great for cystic acne. Do you know anything about this, or if this face oil recipe would work for me? I’ve been using Mario Badescu products which are okay, but my skin is feeling so dry and depleted with all of the acne products. Help!

  11. Jenn Avatar

    I have really sensitive skin and so before I make up my facial serum, I wanted to try out just using the carrier oils. I have since tried coconut oil and rosehip oil (separately). I’m not sure if its because of allergy season and that I my skin is ultra sensitive but I find my skin still has a lot of dry spots and its a little bit red in some areas. Do you think this might be because I haven’t added any essential oils to the mix? Or does it take time for the skin to get used to the carrier oil? Or could I just plain be allergic to all of these carrier oils? Any comments would be much appreciated =)

    1. Sheila Avatar
      Sheila

      Rosehip seed oil has a very high vitamin C and antioxidant concentration, which can irritate sensitive skin. I would dilute it in another oil or something. I personally add it to witch hazel, aloe, glycerin and honey and use it as a morning cleanser, which I then rinse off. Some of the oil does absorb, but I moisturize immediately afterwards. I use an oil blend at night to clean off the days gunk and wipe it off with a warm washcloth. Some people find coconut oil alone to be irritating or drying. You might try shea butter if you tend to be dry, jojoba if you are oily. Sunflower seed oil (you can get it in the cooking and baking aisle of many groceries) is pretty gentle and is non-comedogenic. It also soaks in nicely. Avocado is another good one, very nourishing to the skin. I have dry skin, so I use a blend of oils that I know I am not allergic to. There is lots of info online about the properties of different oils, so play around with the ones you can get at your local organic grocery and see what works for you.

  12. Sandra Avatar

    I’ve got oily, breakout prone skin (hormonal) and have found evening primrose oil & unrefined sea buckthorn oil – which is intensely orange in the bottle, not clear – to be amazing. This mixture, along with my own custom blend of essential oils mixed in, helps keep my breakouts to a minimum. I’d highly recommend them along with kukui nut, hazelnut, perilla & macadamia nut oils. If you just want a simple moisturizing oil blend which also helps calm breakouts, just use the evening primrose oil with the essential oils you prefer. Good choices for oily/acne prone skin are sage, lavender, juniper, palmarosa, rosemary, ylang-ylang, carrot seed, amongst others. I wouldn’t recommend this product for use around the eyes. I see very positive results with these oils overnight, even moreso if I’ve exfoliated well immediately beforehand.

    In the winter my skin gets drier, but is still oily, so I change up my oils. I use my own custom blend, but I’d highly recommend a mix of avocado oil, evening primrose oil & rosehip seed oil as a base for dry skin along with your choice of rose, neroli, jasmine, rosewood, carrot seed or frankincense essential oils, amongst others.

    I personally wouldn’t use either of these moisturizing oils around the eyes unless the essential oils were omitted as I’ve found they can irritate the eyes when off-gassing, which all essential oils do.

    For those who normally don’t work with these types of product ingredients, please do at least a moderate amount of research on essential oils & carrier oils before buying or using them as there is always the possibility of eye/skin irritation or even allergic reaction, as well as getting ripped off by shady suppliers who sell substandard & fake products at inflated prices.

  13. Jillian Avatar

    Hi, I just realized that some of the essential oils I ordered online already contain grapeseed oil and are pre-diluted. How many drops would you suggest I add for this recipe?

  14. Therese Eveland Avatar
    Therese Eveland

    Hi Kati,

    Which Myrrh Essential Oil did you use from Mountain Rose?
    MYRRH ESSENTIAL OIL
    Commiphora myrrha
    From $23.50
    or
    OG
    MYRTLE ESSENTIAL OIL
    Myrtus communis
    From $20.25

  15. Barbara Avatar

    Hi Katie,

    Came across your website when I was looking for DIY skin care recipes. I love all your recipes!

    Do you mind to share your daily and weekly routine for skin care and hair? As I found that you made different lotion bars, face oil, cream etc……but not possible to use them all the same time, right? I am planning to make the necessary one to start with, hope to get some insight from you.
    Thanks.

  16. Qiana Avatar

    Hi Katie, I read this article about a month ago and noticed something has changed. I saved this in my email as a reference for an argan oil product I wanted to buy, but it’s no longer there. The link has been replaced and now leads to Amazon… Is there a reason it’s changed?

  17. Lauraa Avatar

    Just received all of the ingredients to make this today and I’m thrilled to be introduced to new oils like Myrrh. It’s beautiful and earthy. I’ve also ordered ingredients for oil cleansing and the honey cleanser on your blog. Thank you for everything you do! I am loving all your posts and advice.

  18. Dan Avatar

    I have been using a mixture of aloe vera with a jojoba oil to get a good consistency and jojoba is very light and absorbs extememely quickly, so i’m not left over with any excess oil on my skin. I also add a carrot root CO2 for the beta carotene antioxidant plus it gives the moisterizer a bright orange color.

    1. jackie Avatar

      Well instead of using a drop or two (even though don’t know how that would be enough for the whole face), I splashed on more and then my whole face felt a little itchy, due to the lavender oil, even though mixed? so it really has to be one or tow drops!

    2. Sheila Avatar
      Sheila

      I read tamanu oil is supposed to be good for psoriasis. It is a little pricey, but not awful. Good luck!

4.50 from 4 votes (3 ratings without comment)

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