Anti-Aging Rosehip Seed Oil Facial Moisturizer (Better Than Botox)

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Wellness Mama » Blog » Beauty » Anti-Aging Rosehip Seed Oil Facial Moisturizer (Better Than Botox)

We live in a culture that considers drinking raw milk to be strange and dangerous, but injecting the botulism toxin into our skin (Botox) seems to be a perfectly acceptable way to fight wrinkles. Interesting…

Luckily, there are natural ways to fight the signs of aging that don’t involve risky procedures.

This rosehip seed oil facial moisturizer is a wrinkle-fighting powerhouse… and is better for you than Botox. (Though to be fair, it isn’t too tough to be “better” than botulism!)

Benefits of Rosehip Seed Oil

If you’re trying to prevent wrinkles, or even if they’ve already take hold, rosehip seed oil has many unique properties that make it a great choice for aging or damaged skin.

Penetrates Skin

Unlike other oils for mature skin, rosehip seed oil is astringent and considered a “dry oil,” which means it sinks into skin quickly. This allows its essential fatty acids to really penetrate and soothe dry skin.

Boosts Collagen Production

Rosehip seed oil actually encourages skin to form its own collagen due to its naturally occurring vitamin A. Other facial moisturizers with added collagen might claim to be anti-aging, but there’s a problem: collagen molecules are too large for our skin to absorb when they’re applied topically.

Nourishes and Regenerates

Rosehip seed oil keeps skin supple and strong by nourishing skin with vitamins A, C, and E. It’s also very high in linoleic and alpha-linoleic acids, which promote cellular regeneration and keep skin looking youthful.

Soothes Skin and Scars

A 2015 study published in the Journal of Cosmetics shows rosehip seed benefits in wound healing and reduction in scarring after surgical procedures. This same study suggests rosehip seed oil might also reduce the effects of photo-aging from sun exposure due to its vitamin A (retinol) content.

How to Make Rosehip Seed Oil Facial Moisturizer

This rosehip seed oil facial moisturizer recipe contains seven skin-boosting ingredients and absolutely no junk! A little goes a long way so one batch can last months (and still cost much less than expensive anti-aging products).

Choosing Rosehip Seed Oil

When it comes to rosehip seed oil, color matters. In general, conventionally grown rosehip seed oil is usually pale yellow and lacking in beneficial lycopene, minerals, and vitamins A and C. Organic rosehip seed oil tends to have a more vibrant orange-yellow color due to its higher level of beneficial carotenoids and vitamin A. So the source does matter.

Vitamin E

Vitamin E is a great ingredient to include in any face moisturizer for its ability to extend the shelf life of homemade products. It is not a preservative, but it slows the oxidizing of carrier oils. It has a similar effect on skin and helps to fight aging and prevent free radical damage.

Mango Butter

Mango butter is also high in potent antioxidants and contains polyphenols to reduce inflammation and rejuvenate skin. This butter helps to thicken the facial moisturizer, but doesn’t feel greasy on the skin.

Essential Oils

Several essential oils fight the signs of aging particularly well. Frankincense and patchouli have potent skin rejuvenating and wrinkle-fighting properties and lend an earthy scent. For a lighter fragrance, opt for carrot seed and geranium instead. (All of these oils have anti-aging properties, so it just depends on your scent preferences.)

anti aging cream for face

Rosehip Seed Oil Facial Moisturizer Recipe

Katie Wells
With just seven ingredients, this facial moisturizer is easy to make and very nourishing to skin.
4.01 from 472 votes

Ingredients
  

Instructions
 

  • In a heat-safe glass bowl, combine the beeswax, mango butter, and sweet almond oil. 
  • Put the glass bowl on top of a smaller pan filled halfway with water to create a double boiler (the bottom of the glass bowl should not touch the water in the pan). 
  • Put the pan on the stove and turn on the heat to medium high.
  • Stir gently just until everything is melted, then turn off the heat and carefully remove the bowl from the pot. 
  • Let it cool for a few minutes, then stir in the rosehip seed oil, vitamin E, and essential oils. Since these oils are more heat sensitive, you don’t want to get them too hot.
  • Place the glass bowl in the refrigerator for 25-30 minutes, or until the mixture has thickened and cooled, but isn’t so hard that you can’t easily push a finger into it.
  • Use a mixer with the whisk attachment, or a hand whisk to mix the facial moisturizer until creamy and smooth. Stop when it looks like lotion.
  • Store the moisturizer in a glass jar or metal tin.

How to Use

  • Cleanse skin using a cleanser of choice and pat dry. 
  • Use finger tips to gently massage a small amount of this moisturizer into the skin in a circular motion. 

Notes

Use at night or wait several hours before applying makeup.
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Ever used rosehip seed oil in a moisturizer? How did it work for you?

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

263 responses to “Anti-Aging Rosehip Seed Oil Facial Moisturizer (Better Than Botox)”

  1. Nicole Avatar

    Would the consistency be ruined if I just did the beeswax with rosehip oil and vitamin E oil?

  2. Steph Avatar

    What lovely recipe! I am just now making my third batch as I like to use it as a body moisturiser – it’s lovely
    Thank you

  3. Patty Avatar

    Is it possible to buy ‘rosehip seed oil facial moisturizer’ already made from you?

  4. Pam Avatar

    This looks awesome! Could I sub cocoa butter for mango butter? I have it on hand and am dying to jump in and try this!
    Thanks a bunch.

  5. Rachel Avatar

    Is there a way to make this less greasy? Is there something I can add to it after it is already made? I carefully measured everything out, but it’s so greasy I’m not sure I can continue to use it. 🙁 It just sits on top of my skin and doesn’t absorb which is weird because I have such dry skin and live in a desert. Please help. I don’t want this to go to waste. Thank you! Take care. 🙂

  6. Lisa Avatar

    Hello, I made this moisturizer and love how it makes my skin feel but I notice that the texture is beginning to feel gritty, what could be wrong? Btw, all the products are supposedly fresh.
    Thank you!!

    1. Susannah Avatar
      Susannah

      I think it has to do with the melting and cooling points especially the mango butter… If you hear anything let me know

    2. Cherie Avatar

      If I melt the beeswax and then removed it from the heat and then stir in my butters, this stops it from being gritty. This is how I keep my lip balms from being gritty.

  7. Elizabeth Avatar
    Elizabeth

    I’ve been using rosehip seed oil for 6+ months now and while I find it to be perfectly fine as a night time moisturizer (it’s too oily for day use), it isn’t making any kind of difference for my skin. Since I started using it, I turned 39 and my face just looks worse almost every day (because of aging, not the rosehip seed oil). My face is still both oily and flaky and my fine lines are getting deeper everyday. Rosehip seed oil may be better than botox by virtue of not being face-botulism, but it can’t fight genetics and definitely isn’t better for smoothing lines or making the face look more youthful. Not that I’ve tried botox, but it’s dishonest to say that an oil is better than a proven cosmetic treatment. A creepy potentially harmful treatment perhaps, but more effective nonetheless.

  8. Kim Avatar

    Katie,
    I’m prone to breaking out, but my skin get super dry. Currently, I use a mix of Argan oil, Rosehip Oil and Palmarosa Oil as a daily oil. I don’t break out and it feels good going on, but it seems to sit on top of the skin forever, before absorbing (my phone screen is always coated), and once it absorbs my face looks dry again.
    I use shea butter emulsified with a collagen/elastic toner at night but it is super greasy and doesn’t seem to really help the dry skin.
    I would like to try this recipe but the almond oil and beeswax are both heavier oils I am afraid will clog my pores. I’ve already learned my lesson about putting heavier oils on my face. It took six months to correct the effects of OCM.
    Do you think I could switch out the beesway for shea butter and the almond oil for argan? Would the recipe still work?

  9. lucy Avatar

    can you comment on the difference between doterra brand essential oils and the plant therapy one you recommended? i ask because i recently listened to your podcast about the 5 seed “panaseeda” and your guest explained that some oils can be titled “100% X oil” by federal regulation, but is allowed up to 90% of a filler oil. I have heard that is why doterra brand is so expensive, because it is truly 100%. I am specifically thinking of the frankincense and rosehip for this recipe.

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      I researched plant therapy a lot before using them and their oils are also 100% what they say they are (unless they said pre-diluted for specific uses). They also have a kid safe line, which I really like and their oils are much cheaper because they aren’t an MLM.

      1. lucy Avatar

        great! thank you for your speedy response. I am eager to try the recipe this weekend. Thanks for all you do and share with us!!

  10. Emelie Avatar

    Out of curiosity, if I add carrot seed oil to this, will that help with sun protection?

  11. Jela Avatar

    May I replace the mango butter with cocoa butter? Could I use 7 drops of Frankincense and 7 drops of carrot seed essential oil?

  12. Susannah Avatar

    Can I use a stainless steel boiler and whisk it with a metal whisk ? Would that be ok

  13. Leah Avatar

    What would you recommend as an alternative to mango butter as I am allergic. Thanks!

  14. Rose Avatar

    I read that rosehip seed oil oxidizes and that we should not be putting this on our skin. As well as other PUFA oils. Is this true?

  15. Carrie Avatar

    What oil would you recommend in place if almond oil? I have a bit allergy.

  16. Dhanya Avatar

    Hello,

    This is a lovely recipe. How about adding a few drops of rose oil, just for that scent ??

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