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Nail Polishes Go Non-Toxic

Yahoo Beauty
Updated

Still looking for a reason to stop biting your nails? In case your goal-oriented manicures aren’t working, here’s a fact that might get you to quit cold-turkey: Nail polishes have chemicals in them. They’re essentially miniature Behr paint cans for your nails (though Behr, please consider expanding into beauty—irresistible mini packaging could be in your future). And seeing that interior household paint options are trending non-toxic as of late, why not consider the same sort of options for your fingers?

The most convincing “why should I care?” argument here is just to do a quick primer on “The Big Three” chemicals—dibutyl phthalate or DBP, toluene, and formaldehyde—that are (or were, rather) finding a home in nail polish bottles everywhere and how they work. For example, dibutyl phthalate is used to make plastics malleable—essentially what your shower curtain is made out of (great for your nails in theory, not so good when it comes to clean living). According to the US Environmental Protection Agency, DBP could have harmful developmental and reproductive effects. While there’s no conclusive research on humans, it’s enough of a concern that the European Union has banned the chemical from cosmetics and skincare and California targeted DBP as toxic for reproductive and developmental growth. It’s also banned in children’s toys. Additionally, toluene is considered a high hazard by the Environmental Working Group’s Skin Deep Cosmetics Database and is found in gasoline. Lastly, formaldehyde is a known carcinogen and suspected environmental pollutant (and this is just the Reader’s Digest version of this paragraph).

READ THE FULL STORY ON INTO THE GLOSS

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Photographed by Tom Newton. For more on nail polishes, click here.

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