All-Natural Homemade Lipstick Recipe

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Natural Homemade Lipstick Recipe with color variations
Wellness Mama » Blog » Beauty » All-Natural Homemade Lipstick Recipe

I’ve been making natural lip balm, lipstick, and chapstick recipes for years, although it took me a while to actually get it to the point of a recipe. Typically I would just eyeball the ingredients, which shows you how easy this recipe is to make!

This homemade lipstick recipe mimics a creamy, full coverage lipstick and packs plenty of color. However, if you aren’t a fan of colored lipsticks, you can make this recipe without any added color options to achieve a basic natural lip chap.

That’s the beauty of making your makeup from scratch, like my DIY eye shadow, is you can make it exactly the way you like it!

Why Homemade Lipstick?

Wondering why you’d take the time and trouble to make your own natural makeup?

Surprisingly, conventional lipstick can be a source of harmful chemicals and since it is used on the skin (lips) and near the mouth, these chemicals can be easily absorbed. These homemade lipstick variations let you create a personalized lipstick color that is chemical-free and inexpensive to make.

Also, homemade just means more! Give these as an inexpensive but thoughtful gift at holidays or birthdays that friends and family are sure to enjoy.

Customizing Your Perfect Natural Lipstick Color

To get the hue in the picture above, I used a tiny pinch of beetroot powder (1/8 tsp or less), 1/4 tsp cocoa powder, 1/8 tsp bentonite clay, 1/8 tsp cinnamon, and a drop of peppermint essential oil (just because I like the smell). Jump to the recipe for other color customization options, all from natural colorants.

If you like a darker shade, just add a little more cocoa powder after mixing to darken slightly until you reach your preferred tone.

Now let’s get into the recipe!

Natural Tinted Lipstick Recipe

This recipe makes a moisturizing tube lipstick with a good amount of pigment and coverage. For a lighter, glossier look, try this tinted lip balm recipe.

Natural Homemade Lipstick Recipe with color variations
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3.85 from 84 votes

Homemade Lipstick Recipe

This base recipe will create a smooth, clear lipstick that is very moisturizing and protective. If you want, you can add color with the following add-ins to create a color of your choice.
Yield: 0
Author: Katie Wells

Materials

Base Lipstick Recipe

Optional Color Add-Ins

Instructions

Homemade Lipstick Instructions

  • Melt the beeswax, shea butter/cocoa butter and coconut oil in a glass jar without a lid in a small pot of simmering (not boiling) water. It should melt quickly because so little of each ingredient is used.
  • When melted, remove from heat and add any optional ingredients like color or scent.
  • Once all ingredients are mixed well but still liquid, use a dropper to pour into the lip chap container. I used the glass dropper from an old tincture bottle. Fill just below the top as it will expand slightly as it cools. Leave to cool for at least half an hour.

Notes

Store in a cool place (under 80 degrees) or it will soften.

More Natural Makeup Recipes

Ever made your own cosmetics? How did it go? What hue would you make of this recipe? Share below!

This natural homemade lipstick recipe is an easy alternative to commercial versions that contain harmful chemicals. Made with all natural ingredients.

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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

326 responses to “All-Natural Homemade Lipstick Recipe”

  1. Karen Krause Avatar
    Karen Krause

    I would like to make lip gloss and put it in glass roller bottles but I’m looking for a recipe that won’t be too thin or too thick for the bottles! Any suggestions?

    1. Miki Avatar

      Straight jojoba oil in a 4:1 parts mix with castor oil (for shine) makes the best liquid lip gloss. Jojoba ester wax is the most similar in consistency to the sebum produced by your own skin, making it a perfect complement and the best part is that jojoba doesn’t become rancid, so it travels easily in heat excursions. It also holds colour infusions well (I make heat infusions using alkanet, grass indigoes and hennas for this purpose). Castor oil is very thick and sticky, so never use more than 1/5 of your total volume, or you’ll be annoyed by the results.

  2. Senna Avatar

    Does anyone have a idea to help it mix .mine isn’t mixing the colors and the oils ?

  3. Asha Avatar

    I tried the moisturizing lotion and it was awesome!! Thank you so much for the recipe. I shared the lotion amongst my friends in different containers ofcourse, and they loved it!!

  4. Senna Avatar

    Hi thanks for the recipe ! But I was wondering his to avoid the beet powder sinking to the bottom .because when I tried it the beet powder didn’t melt in and sank to the bottom.how do I avoid this ?

  5. moe Avatar

    isn’t using MICA going away from natural healthy ingredients. I thought commecial lipsticks use MICA to get their colors and it is harmful like other minerals and metals

  6. Sarah Avatar

    I used beet root powder and the granules do not mix in well. Is there somewhere I can get more finely ground powder? Or a trick to get it mixed in? I love the consistency of the rest of the balm, but the granules are very annoying. They are like sand!

    1. Miki Avatar

      You can fully pulverize best root powder in a coffee grinder or spice mill. You can also use alkanet, henna, and rosehip powders, which are often more finely ground, commercially. Don’t worry about the henna staining your lips, unless you’re using a fixative.

  7. jay Avatar

    Hi the colors turned out great, with cocoa powder, with beet powder, but do not taint the lips even a bit. what is the mistake

  8. Lina Avatar

    Dear Wellness Mama,

    since this awesome recipe is naturally home made and uses no preservatives. how long before it turns bad or the colour changes and we have to toss it out(expiration date)?

  9. nadia Avatar

    Is there any substitute to the bentonite clay. I have a clay mask that has bentonite in it but unless I order online I haven’t found pure bentonite clay. I don’t know if i want to try with the clay mask i have since its only 1/4 tsp or if there is another option maybe to get a matte finish?

  10. Denise Avatar

    I am very excited to try this recipe out especially as a teen newly experimenting with make up.My mother wears make up every two years or so due to the reason that commercial make up tends to be extremely harmful even with the supposedly non toxic ones.They claim to be non toxic however even the most natural have lead,titanium to be found in them -which is initially harmful to the body as a metal especially when put on your skin which is the most absorbent of things.

  11. Gloria Avatar

    Mine creates a small white dotted mold after about a week in the container- any ideas?

    1. Whitney Avatar
      Whitney

      Are you sure it’s mold? Mine sometimes has dots at the bottom right away from I think essential oils not completely dissolving. I wouldn’t think it would create mold that quick.

  12. kris Avatar

    Can anyone say what those options are? Right now NOTHING works because water based colorants will NOT mix with oil based base like waxes. Even emulsifiers are not helping any.

  13. Sonya Rowe Avatar
    Sonya Rowe

    There are other options that work better than beet root powder, and if you do use beet root powder it will mix if you use an emulsifier. Google emulsifiers to see what to do.

  14. Kat Avatar

    Hi, I was wondering if you know of anything beeswax can be replaced with? It’s used in a lot of DIY recipes and I’m allergic to it. Thanks so much 🙂

  15. eboni Avatar

    I want this to work so bad but my beet root poweder always sink to the bottom making the bottom super dark and the top slightly redish white.

    1. Stephanie Avatar
      Stephanie

      I am having the same problem with separation. I have two items I think it could be. Either elevation (unlikelier, I think). We’re at about 7,000 ft where I live. Not sure what elevation this has been successful at. Other thing I’m thinking is that my Shea butter may be off. It smells a little earthy and I’m wondering if it is causing the separation.

  16. Tiffany Avatar
    Tiffany

    Thanks for sharing. I like the recipe. I would use a glass container to store it, though. The production/use/disposal of plastic detracts from the health of life on the planet.

3.85 from 84 votes (84 ratings without comment)

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