Making your own skincare products at home is one of the most rewarding things you can do as a beauty enthusiast. You control exactly what goes into your products, you can customise formulas for your specific skin type, and you develop a genuine understanding of how ingredients work that no amount of reading product labels can give you. But starting out can feel overwhelming. There are hundreds of ingredients to learn, dozens of techniques to master, and a great deal of conflicting information online about what works and what does not.
This guide cuts through the noise. It covers the essential equipment you need to get started, the key ingredient categories every beginner should understand, and three beginner-friendly recipes, a face serum, a lip balm, and a body butter, that you can make at home with ingredients available from The Skin Science Company.
Want a beautifully designed beginner's guide? The Art of Formulation is a 30-page full-colour guide with DIY recipes for serums, balms, and body butters, ingredient profiles, and step-by-step instructions. Instant PDF download.
Essential Equipment for Beginner Formulators
You do not need a laboratory to start making skincare products at home. A basic set of equipment is sufficient for most beginner recipes, and most of it is either already in your kitchen or available inexpensively online.
The most important piece of equipment is a precision digital scale accurate to 0.01g. Cosmetic formulation is done by weight, not by volume. Using a measuring spoon or cup instead of a scale introduces significant errors, particularly for small-batch formulas where even a 0.5g error can change the percentage of an active ingredient meaningfully. A scale accurate to 0.01g costs approximately $30–50 and is the single most important investment a beginner formulator can make.
You will also need a set of heat-resistant glass beakers (100ml and 250ml are the most useful sizes), a digital thermometer, a small immersion blender or milk frother for emulsions, a pH meter or pH strips, and a selection of packaging containers. Amber glass dropper bottles are suitable for serums and facial oils; aluminium tins are suitable for balms and butters; HDPE plastic bottles are suitable for lotions and body washes.
The Five Ingredient Categories Every Beginner Should Know
Carrier oils and butters form the base of most anhydrous (water-free) products and the oil phase of emulsions. They provide moisturisation, skin feel, and the delivery vehicle for active ingredients. Key beginner-friendly options include Jojoba Oil (suitable for all skin types), Shea Butter (excellent for body care), and Sweet Almond Oil (lightweight, widely tolerated).
Humectants are water-attracting ingredients that draw moisture to the skin. Glycerin is the most widely used humectant in cosmetic formulation and is suitable for all skin types at 2–5% in leave-on products. Hyaluronic Acid (Sodium Hyaluronate) is a popular humectant for facial serums, used at 0.1–2% depending on molecular weight.
Emollients are ingredients that soften and smooth the skin by filling the spaces between skin cells. Most carrier oils and butters are emollients. Esters such as Isopropyl Myristate and Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride are lightweight synthetic emollients that provide a silky, non-greasy skin feel.
Active ingredients are the functional components of a formula that deliver a specific cosmetic benefit. Common beginner-friendly actives include Niacinamide (used at 2–5% for skin tone), Vitamin C (L-Ascorbic Acid at 5–20% or stabilised derivatives at lower concentrations), and Allantoin (used at 0.1–2% for soothing).
Preservatives are essential in any formula that contains water. The most beginner-friendly option is Phenoxyethanol at 0.5–1.0%, which is effective across a broad pH range and compatible with most cosmetic ingredients. Never skip the preservative in a water-containing formula.
Beginner Recipe 1: A Simple Facial Serum
| Ingredient | INCI Name | % (w/w) | Grams (30g batch) | Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Distilled Water | Aqua | 84.5% | 25.35g | Base |
| Glycerin | Glycerin | 5.0% | 1.5g | Humectant |
| Sodium Hyaluronate (LMW) | Sodium Hyaluronate | 0.5% | 0.15g | Humectant / skin plumping |
| Niacinamide | Niacinamide | 5.0% | 1.5g | Active / skin tone |
| Allantoin | Allantoin | 0.5% | 0.15g | Soothing active |
| Xanthan Gum | Xanthan Gum | 0.3% | 0.09g | Thickener / texture |
| Phenoxyethanol | Phenoxyethanol | 0.7% | 0.21g | Preservative |
| Citric Acid (50% solution) | Citric Acid | q.s. | q.s. to pH 5.5 | pH adjustment |
| Total | 100% | 30g |
Method: Pre-disperse xanthan gum in a small amount of glycerin (slurry method) to prevent lumping. Dissolve allantoin and niacinamide in warm distilled water (40°C). Add the xanthan slurry and remaining glycerin, stirring until smooth. Cool to room temperature. Add sodium hyaluronate and stir until fully dissolved. Add phenoxyethanol and adjust pH to 5.0–5.5 with citric acid solution. Package in an amber glass dropper bottle.
Beginner Recipe 2: A Simple Lip Balm
| Ingredient | INCI Name | % (w/w) | Grams (30g batch) | Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beeswax | Cera Alba | 20.0% | 6.0g | Structure / hardness |
| Shea Butter | Butyrospermum Parkii Butter | 20.0% | 6.0g | Emollient / skin feel |
| Castor Oil | Ricinus Communis Seed Oil | 20.0% | 6.0g | Gloss / adhesion |
| Sweet Almond Oil | Prunus Amygdalus Dulcis Oil | 30.0% | 9.0g | Emollient / skin feel |
| Vitamin E (Tocopherol) | Tocopherol | 0.5% | 0.15g | Antioxidant |
| Flavour / Essential Oil | Parfum / per INCI | 1.0% | 0.3g | Fragrance |
| Candelilla Wax (optional, for vegan) | Euphorbia Cerifera Wax | q.s. | Replace beeswax at 50% quantity | Vegan beeswax alternative |
| Total | 100% | 30g |
Method: Melt beeswax and shea butter together at 70–75°C. Add castor oil and sweet almond oil and stir until uniform. Cool to 60°C and add Vitamin E and fragrance. Pour immediately into lip balm tubes or small tins. Allow to cool completely at room temperature before capping. Do not disturb during cooling to avoid a pitted surface.
Beginner Recipe 3: A Simple Body Butter
| Ingredient | INCI Name | % (w/w) | Grams (100g batch) | Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shea Butter | Butyrospermum Parkii Butter | 40.0% | 40.0g | Base butter |
| Cocoa Butter | Theobroma Cacao Seed Butter | 20.0% | 20.0g | Hardness / skin feel |
| Jojoba Oil | Simmondsia Chinensis Seed Oil | 25.0% | 25.0g | Lightweight emollient |
| Arrowroot Powder | Maranta Arundinacea Root Powder | 5.0% | 5.0g | Reduces greasiness |
| Vitamin E (Tocopherol) | Tocopherol | 0.5% | 0.5g | Antioxidant |
| Fragrance / Essential Oil | Parfum / per INCI | 1.0% | 1.0g | Fragrance |
| Total | 91.5% | 91.5g | Adjust water to 100% |
Method: Melt shea butter and cocoa butter together at 65–70°C. Add jojoba oil and stir until uniform. Cool to approximately 30–35°C (the mixture should be opaque and beginning to solidify at the edges). Add arrowroot powder, Vitamin E, and fragrance. Whip with a hand mixer on high speed for 3–5 minutes until light and fluffy. Package in a wide-mouth jar. Store away from direct heat to prevent melting.
Frequently Asked Questions
A fully anhydrous body butter (one that contains no water, aloe vera juice, or other aqueous ingredients) does not require a preservative system. However, an antioxidant such as Vitamin E (Tocopherol) at 0.1–0.5% is recommended to protect the unsaturated fatty acids in your carrier oils from oxidation. If your body butter contains any water-based ingredients, a preservative is required.
The Skin Science Company supplies cosmetic-grade carrier oils, butters, waxes, actives, and personal care bases to DIY formulators and small businesses across Australia, with fast 2–3 day dispatch from our warehouse in Epping, VIC. All ingredients are supplied with INCI names and usage rate guidance. Browse the full range at theskinsciencecompany.com.au.
For personal use, the key safety steps are: use cosmetic-grade ingredients from a reputable supplier, follow the recommended usage rates for each ingredient, include a preservative in any water-containing formula, conduct a patch test before first use, and check the pH of water-containing formulas. For products intended for sale, additional safety documentation including a Product Information File (PIF) and challenge testing is required under Australian cosmetic regulations.
Ready to start your formulation journey?
The Art of Formulation is a 30-page full-colour beginner's guide with DIY recipes for serums, balms, and body butters, ingredient profiles, and step-by-step instructions. Instant PDF download.
Get The Art of FormulationDisclaimer: All ingredients and products referenced in this article are intended for cosmetic use only. No therapeutic, medicinal, or TGA-regulated claims are made or implied. Always conduct a patch test before use and ensure your finished formulations comply with Australian cosmetic regulations.