Make-up - Eyeliner

Eye Liner - free shopping guide from Ethical Consumer

Eye Liner - free shopping guide from Ethical Consumer


This is a buyers' guide from Ethical Consumer, the UK's leading alternative consumer organisation. Since 1989 we've been researching and recording the social and environmental records of companies, and making the results available to you in a simple format.

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The report includes:

  • Ethical and environmental ratings for 24 eye liners
  • Best Buy recommendations
  • Toxic ingredients of make-up
  • Animal issues with cosmetics
  • Harmul cultural effects of make-up

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Score Ratings

Our ratings are live updated scores from our primary research database. They are based on primary and secondary research across 19 categories. Find out more about our ethical ratings

 

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The Full Scorecard shows the 'black marks' for each product, by each of the 19 categories. The bigger the mark, the worse the score. So for example a big black circle under 'Worker Rights' shows that the company making this product has been severely criticised for worker abuses.

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Best Buys

as of September 2006

As our ratings are constantly updated, it is possible that these companies will not always come out top on the scoretable.

For eyeliner, Neal's Yard Remedies' organic eyeliner comes out best.

Dr Hauschka, Barry M, Logona, Sante, Lavera, Hard Candy and Urban Decay are also best buys.


Making up is hard to do

The average woman spends 10 working days a year getting ready for work while the beauty industry takes hundreds of pounds of women's money annually.(1) Ruth Rosselson asks whether it's really worth it.

Makeup is the ultimate capitalist success story, the perfect alliance between the media, popular culture and the multinational companies who benefit financially. Cosmetics companies, through extremely effective marketing campaigns, have persuaded women that they need makeup to enhance their self-esteem, appear attractive, succeed in business and attract a mate. Even the ‘natural’ look requires the use of makeup.

When magazines regularly run photo galleries of (female) celebrities who dare to leave the house without makeup, the message to women is clear. These products are essential to femininity, success, and women’s presence in the public sphere. “Every woman knows that, regardless of all her other achievements, she is a failure if she is not beautiful” argues Germaine Greer,(2)and integral to this current definition of beauty is the application of makeup.

Toxic ingredients

It has been estimated that some women could be absorbing around 2kg of chemicals through cosmetics and toiletries each year.(3) The concern is that the synthetic ingredients used in these products could be toxic and some have been linked to cancer, reproductive problems and other health risks.(4,5) This is particularly relevant for a product like lipstick, because of the amount that is absorbed when eating, drinking or licking the lips.(5)

The US-based Environmental Working Group (EWG) is running a Safe Cosmetics campaign and trying to encourage companies to sign its “Compact for Safe Cosmetics” pledge. So far, none of the mainstream companies on the table have signed and many of their products are listed by EWG as including ingredients of varying degrees of concern.(4) Logona and Lavera have signed the pledge while Dr Hauschka, Sante and Green People are companies which also explicitly avoid such chemicals.


Animal ingredients

A number of different animal ingredients could be used in your makeup. Vegetarians should watch out for stearic acid and glycerin, both of which could come from animal or vegetable sources, sorbitan or octyl stearate, cochineal/carmine (found in lipsticks and made from crushed beetles), and silk - found in some eyeshadows. Vegans should also look out for beeswax, honey and lanolin.(6)

Unfortunately, most products don’t include ingredients listings. However, all makeup made by the following companies is suitable for vegetarians and they also indicate which are suitable for vegans: Barry M, Body Shop, Bnevertoobusy, Green People, Hard Candy, Logona, Sante and Urban Decay. Lavera and Dr Hauschka indicate which products are suitable for vegetarians and vegans.


Animal Testing

Although the testing of cosmetic ingredients on animals in the UK was banned in 1998, there is currently no ban on the selling of cosmetics (or the ingredients which go in them) which have been tested abroad. According to Animal Aid, this means that most of the products we see on our shelves are not cruelty free because many countries continue to require that all new ingredients must be animal tested to ensure safety.(7) Consequently, each time a new “super improved” product is brought out, it’s likely that some animal testing has been involved.

A proposed EU ban on the sale and marketing of cosmetics that have been tested on animals is currently under negotiation. Without such a ban, testing could still take place outside the EU, whereas a complete sales ban would force companies to use non-animal methods.(7)

A number of companies state that they do not test their products or ingredients on animals. However campaigners argue that the only guarantee that no animal testing has been taking place at any stage is the existence of a fixed cut-off date policy. Companies with such a policy are; Barry M, Bnevertoobusytobebeautiful, Body Shop, Green People, Hard Candy, Lavera, Logona, Sante and Urban Decay.


Harmful cultural practice?

Susan Jeffries in her book “Beauty and Misogyny” suggests that the wearing of makeup not only consumes women’s time and money but also their emotional space.(1) Though makeup’s supporters argue that it offers an opportunity for women to exercise creativity, this is rather limited, she argues, because “women are required to conform to strict rules in order to function in workplaces and escape criticism and discrimination.”(1) She concludes that makeup fits the criterion of a harmful cultural practice as defined by the UN, because “the substances that women apply to their hair, face and body in pursuit of beauty are directly dangerous to our health”.(1)


Links


References

1 Susan Jeffries, Beauty & Misogyny 2005
2 Germaine Greer, the Whole Woman 2000
3 Green People website, www.greenpeople.co.uk/ viewed July 2006
4 www.ewg.org/ viewed July 2006, also
5 Women’s Environmental Network, Ending the Cosmetics Cover Up/Getting Lippy, Cosmetics, toiletries and the Environment Factsheet, also http://safershopping.wwf.org.uk/
6 Email from Chris Olivant of the Vegetarian Society, 8th July 2006
7 Animal Aid factfile, on animal testing 2003 www.animalaid.org.uk
8 www.avoncompany.com viewed July 2006
9 hoovers.com 7/9/05
10 email from Clarins 7/3/06
11 BUAV factsheet 11/04
12 Who Owns Whom 2003/4
13 Hoovers.com 25/8/05 14 www.bigcampaign.org viewed July 2006
15 www.uncaged.org 17/2/06
16 www.Naturewatch.org July 2006
17 Baby Milk action www.babymilkaction.org

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