Eco-Friendly Beauty Products That Give Back
Benevolent indie brands that help sustain the earth's beauty while boosting yours.
By Elizabeth Flahive
Eco-Friendly Beauty Products
SEA OF CHANGE
Sylvie and Olivia Chantecaille
Mercury levels aside, here's another reason to steer clear of tuna rolls: The bluefin species (popular in sushi specials) is at risk of extinction. This is one reason why the mother-daughter duo behind Chantecaille is donating 5 percent of the proceeds from their eye and cheek compacts to the Pew Fellowship in Marine Conservation (pewoceanscience.org), which strives to stop overfishing, so your grandkids can have sashimi, too.
Eco-Friendly Beauty Products
TROPIC OF CARING
Lisa Hoffman
After being led by a "nose" (industry speak for perfumer) on scent treks through the rainforests of Brazil and Costa Rica, Hoffman found more than the right fragrance for her home spa collection: She discovered the urgent need to prevent deforestation. To do her part, Hoffman is donating 20 percent of all sales from her Spa Bath and Shower collection and the new Japanese Agarwood and Madagascar Orchid fragrances to the Rainforest Foundation (rainforestfoundation.org), cofounded by her eco-mentors Sting and Trudie Styler.
Eco-Friendly Beauty Products
ANIMAL INSTINCTS
Kate Hudson and David Babaii
Introduced to WildAid by activist extraordinaire Angelina Jolie, Babaii rallied client and close confidante Hudson to help develop David Babaii for WildAid, a hair-care line that donates 10 percent of all profits to the animal-conservation group. The fauna-loving pair has spent the past three years ensuring that what's left out of the products — sulfates, parabens, and, of course, all animal products — is just as important as the nourishing Amazonian cupuaçu butter and mineral-rich volcanic ash that go in.
Eco-Friendly Beauty Products
CARIBBEAN QUEEN
Yael Alkalay
Getting away to the Bahamas is an annual Alkalay family tradition, but during one visit, the Red Flower founder began to notice that the cherished beaches she'd visited every year were shrinking. Determined to preserve the island for future generations, she decided to lessen her vacation carbon footprint by donating proceeds from her Bahamas-inspired Ocean line to Project Blue (betruetoblue.com), an organization that funds conservation of the region's coral reefs. The goal: $100,000 over the next five years.






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