TL;DR: Not all vegan skincare advice floating around wellness circles is accurate. Three persistent myths — that vegan automatically means gentle, that oils clog pores, and that handmade products aren't "serious" skincare — deserve a closer look so you can make choices rooted in knowledge, not marketing noise.
A product can be 100% vegan and still irritate the heck out of your skin. Vegan simply means no animal-derived ingredients were used. It doesn't speak to whether the formula contains synthetic fragrances, harsh sulfates, or drying alcohols.
This matters for anyone who practices yoga regularly. Your skin goes through a lot — temperature shifts, sweat, friction from mats and props. Choosing products labeled "vegan" without reading the actual ingredient list can leave you dealing with dryness, redness, or breakouts that have nothing to do with your practice.
The fix is straightforward: read beyond the front label. Flip the product over. A short, recognizable ingredient list — think coconut oil, shea butter, essential oils — tells you more than any marketing badge ever will.
Brands can slap "vegan" on a formula that still contains dozens of synthetic compounds. The FDA does not regulate the term "vegan" on cosmetic labels, which means it's on you to know what you're actually putting on your body.
A cleaner approach? Look for products where the vegan claim is backed by a genuinely minimal ingredient list. When the entire formula is five to eight ingredients you could find in a kitchen or garden, you're working with something that's both vegan and gentle.
Somewhere along the way, the wellness internet decided that coconut oil clogs pores and should be avoided at all costs. This myth gets repeated so often in skincare forums that many yogis skip one of the most nourishing plant-based ingredients available.
The full picture is more nuanced. Pure, unrefined coconut oil is comedogenic on its own, applied directly to acne-prone facial skin. That's a very specific scenario. When coconut oil is blended into a properly formulated soap, body butter, or exfoliator — especially one designed to rinse off or absorb fully — the comedogenic concern largely disappears.
Your body skin and your face skin are different ecosystems. The skin on your arms, legs, and torso has fewer sebaceous glands and tolerates oils beautifully, especially after the dehydrating effects of a heated practice or long meditation session.
Coconut oil brings real benefits to the table:
Dismissing coconut oil entirely because of one oversimplified rule means missing out on an ingredient that's been central to wellness traditions for centuries. Context matters more than blanket bans.
This myth is quieter but just as persistent: the assumption that handmade skincare is somehow less effective or less "real" than what comes off a factory line. Some yogis gravitate toward clinical-looking products because they seem more legitimate, even when the ingredient lists tell a different story.
Mass-produced skincare often prioritizes shelf stability and profit margin over skin health. That's why you see long lists of preservatives, emulsifiers, and stabilizers — they keep a product viable for years on a warehouse shelf. Handmade products, crafted in small batches, don't need most of those additives because they're formulated fresh and meant to be used, not stockpiled.
Small-batch production also allows for something factory skincare can't easily offer: intention. When a body scrub or soap is made by hand, there's attention paid to texture, ingredient ratios, and how the product actually feels during use. For anyone who treats skincare as ritual rather than chore — and if you're reading this, that's probably you — that difference is tangible.
Think of it this way: nobody questions the legitimacy of a handmade meal over a frozen dinner. The same logic applies to what you put on your skin. Fewer processed ingredients, more care in preparation, and a closer connection to the source material isn't a weakness. It's exactly what mindful skincare looks like.
The thread connecting all three myths is the same: shortcuts in thinking lead to shortcuts in self-care. Just like you wouldn't pick a yoga class based solely on its name without understanding the style, pace, and teacher — skincare deserves that same curiosity.
Read ingredients. Ask questions. Trust simplicity. Your skin, like your practice, responds best to what's real.
Vegan Holistic Skincare
ENSO Apothecary is a unique holistic wellness brand that goes beyond simple retail by offering ZEN-FUELED, Coconut-powered vegan skincare rooted in...
Fort Worth, Texas
View full profile