INNISFREE GREEN TEA MINT FRESH SHAMPOO

March 09, 2018



Today review is going to be about Innisfree and is about their....

 
Green Tea Mint Fresh Shampoo.

A little diescription that comes in the bottle says:
"Enriched with green tea and mint extracts from Jeju island that delivers freshness the scalp and hair."


If you have read some of my post you would know that I have an oily scalp, which combine with the humid weather where I live doesn’t make any easy for me to maintain a healthy scalp which lead me to have hair loss.
That’s why I been searching for a good shampoo that even if doesn’t help me with the hair loss, at least would control the amount if sebum my scalp produces during the day.
When I was doing a compulsive shopping on the Innisfree website I look at the hair range and sow the Green Tea Mint line, which says it helps to maintain a fresher scalp and to control the oil production.
So, after months of use (maybe 2 to 3), I bring you my review hopping it would help you if any of you have the same problem or are trying to use a less chemical shampoo.

On the website the description shows:
Refreshing deep cleansing silicone-free shampoo
1. Mint formulation for sebum control
2. Silicon-free.
The green tea and silicon-free components add moisture to your hair and refresh your scalp without leaving a residue.
3. Fresh, natural fragrance.
A fresh and natural fragrance to refresh your mood!






Ingredients: Water, Sodium Laureth Sulfate, Glycerin, Cocamide Mea, Cocamidopro Pyl Betaine, Laureth 23, Sodium Chloride, Dipropylene Glycol, Potassium Cocoyl Gly Cinate, Polyquaternium 10, Polyquaternium 7, Glycol Distearate, Menthol, Citrus Limon Lemon Peel Oil, Rosmarinus Officinalis Rosemary Leaf Oil, Mentha Piperita Peppermint Oil, Helianthus Annuus Sunflower Seed Oil, Mentha Viridis Spearmint Leaf Oil, Panthenol, Citrus Unshiu Peel Extract, Camellia Sinensis Leaf Extract, Opuntia Coccinellifera Fruit Extract, Camellia Japonica Leaf Extract, Orchid Extract, Mentha Arvensis Leaf Extract, Butylene Glycol, Citric Acid, Disodium Edta, Sodium Benzoate, Potassium Sorbate, Phenoxyethanol, Ethylhexylglycerin.

Experience:
Well, I consider myself as a sensitive skin to products that contain mint or tea tree, and for being a shampoo where the name put Green tea and mint as the ingredients that make the shampoo appealing to the consumer I was disappointed.

It does have the mint smell and you can feel a singly really faint fresh sensation in the scalp unless you use a bunch of shampoo on the hair, if you see the ingredient list the green tea comes almost at the very end of all the natural ingredients that the shampoo contains, so I don’t even see the putting green tea at the name of the shampoo, for me is just that people l know jejudo is famous because if the green tea so it’s just to appeal the consumer. Unless they read the ingredients and notice that.

For me, unfortunately, the shampoo didn’t improve at all the condition of my scalp, it didn’t control the oil production, didn’t help with the amount of hair loss, and the refreshing sensation for me it was minimal even that a have sensitivity towards mint,  it does give nice moisture to the hair and makes it soft at touch and doesn’t contain silicon, and is paraben free so if you have a concern about that this could be an option for you to try. But for me, I would get the same result from any other shampoo at my local drugstore and cheaper too because of the shipping and all that.
So as a conclusion if you have similar hair and scalp condition as I don’t think is worth the hassle :/ as all brands they have amazing and no so amazing products, and everyone is different so Hope it helps the review.

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