How to make natural Shampoo
Lately, I have been finding it exciting to make my own cleaning supplies and my own exfoliant. I’ve desided to branch out and see what else I can make at home. This is becoming a very nice way to save money, not to mention the ingrediants are SO natural and free of all the other junk you find in all these products.
On to my next homemade item.
Shampoo!
I searched the internet for this one, and found TWO VERY different recipes. I want to post BOTH of them, as you can choose which you would prefer to try.
One is extremely easy, and the other harder. One is cheap, and the other a little more expensive. Both are all natural though.
Simple Recipe for Shampoo (found on DIYnatural.com)
- 1 Tbsp baking soda
- 1 cup water
Mix up in the container of your choice.
Directions: Simply shake the bottle before each use and gently massage into the hair and scalp for a minute or two and rinse.
Complex Recipe for Shampoo (Found on EHow.com)
Things You’ll Need
7 oz. distilled water
4 tbsp. liquid castile soap (1oz.)
6 tbsp. herbs
Glass jar or bowl
Cover for the jar or bowl (doesn’t have to close tightly)
Glass or plastic 8 oz. bottle
Non- aluminum tea kettle or pot
Strainer (stainless steel or bamboo)
Spoon
Instructions
- 1
Choose two or three herbs for your hair type (see Tips). For example, crushed lavender flowers and rosemary work well with any type of hair. Purchase herbs at most natural foods and health stores.
- 2
Pour the distilled water into a small pot and bring it to a boil.
- 3
Put your herbs into a strainer over a glass jar or bowl.
- 4
Fill the bottle that you’ll be using for the finished shampoo with the liquid castile soap.
- 5
Put your herbs into a strainer over a glass jar or bowl.
- 6
Place the cover on the container and let the herbs to steep anywhere from 10 to 30 minutes, depending on how strong your want the mixture. Be very careful that none of the herb leaves fall into the herbal water.
- 7
Pour the herbal water into the bottle with the liquid castile soap.
Tips & Warnings
Castile soap is made from vegetable oils instead of animal fats. These oils include almond , olive, coconut, jojoba and hemp.
Label the bottle with the date and the herbs that you have used to make the shampoo. The shampoo will stay good for about a year.
Use dried herbs that you cut into small pieces, or use fresh herbs if you have them.
You can use whole flowers such as lavender, red clover or marigold, but crush them first to release more of the flowers aroma.
If you have blond hair use light colored herbs.
For normal hair use crushed lavender flowers, rosemary, red clover, horsetail, chamomile and marigold.
Tea tree leaves, nettle, sage, basil, rosemary and lavender flowers work well for hair loss.
For gray hair use nettle, sage or rosemary plus any herbs that are recommended for your type of hair.
Peppermint, rosemary, nettle, burdock, tea tree leaves, lemon grass and orris root are recommended for oily hair.
Sage, lavender, nettle, rosemary, comfrey and indigo root work well for coarse or curly black hair. Jojoba oil added to the shampoo will also work nicely.
Crushed lavender flowers, crushed orange flowers, red clover, comfrey, elder flowers, chamomile or marigold work for dry hair. Add jojoba oil to the shampoo.
Peppermint, lemon grass, birch and white willow bark, nettle and comfrey leaves help with dandruff.
























Thanks for sharing! It is amazing how many nutritive properties herbs have!
Mel S recently posted..Easy Pasta Salad Bar
Completely! I was shocked myself.
Thanks for stophttp://ssimplyme.com/wp-admin/edit-comments.php#comments-formping by!
Can’t wait to try them….will start with the easy one. ;O)
Really?!? Baking soda?! Wow

Anne @ GreenEggs&Moms recently posted..Flying With Kids the Easy Way (Yes, You Read that Right!)
haha ya! I was shocked too. Gosh, baking soda works on practically EVERYTHING!
Wow! Simple as baking soda and water, who’d have thought it’d be so easy? I knew you could make a dry shampoo with baby powder. You could mix in some baking soda too I bet. You just rub the baby powder into your roots and brush out. Great for days you don’t have time to wash it.
Shannon recently posted..Sleep rules my life
That’s an idea for the dry shampoo. Might have to try it out and see how it works. I was totally shocked myself that it was just baking soda and water. I mean the other recipe made sense, all the ingredients and work involved, but the first one was like “WOW! This is WAY to easy” Pleasure having you stop by.