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our selection of the day
the virtues of donkey
milk
Donke'sy milk is ideal against eczema, psoriasis, dry skin, and turns out to be
a very effective anti-wrinkle. It is also suitable for people allergic to cow
milk and other milk substitutes.
read more ...
What type of skin?
Mature skin, using the restructuring, moisturizing and
firming virtues of milk.
Oily skin (acne) using the restructuring virtues
Super dry skin, using the restructuring and
moisturizing virtues
Skin problems with psoriasis.
Naturane did not just put donkey's milk
in some cosmetics. We sought to combine the properties of donkey's milk to
other components in order to have a real effect on your skin. With the
combination of donkey's milk and other components, we created cosmetics for all
types of skin:
Donkey Milk through the years:
Donkey milk is a very ancient product. Used since the dawn of time, its amazing properties have been known ever since.
The oldest historical traces date back to 2500 BC and are found on Egyptian low-relief sculptures. However, it was only with the Renaissance that donkey milk received proper scientific consideration.
A few memorable historical events:
It is said that Cleopatra, queen of Egypt, took care of her great beauty and velvet skin by taking donkey milk baths. To do this, she needed about 700 donkeys!
Romans used donkey milk because of its therapeutic benefits. Nerone's wife Poppea used this precious liquid to keep her skin shiny and smooth.
The roman empress Messalina, wife of Emperor Claudio I, used to make beauty masks with slices of bread soaked in donkey milk.
Francis I, King of France, exhausted by war and excess, followed the advice of a doctor from Constantinople and underwent a donkey milk treatment that was like a miracle to him. He is quoted as saying, “In just one day, the milk restored my health. I owe this to donkeys rather than to professors”.
Napoleon Bonaparte's sister Pauline used to take donkey milk baths. This habit was regarded as inappropriate in a time when this milk was very rare.
During the 19th century, merchants used to stride along major European cities with donkeys shouting to the crowds, “Donkey milk! Good donkey milk!”
The rich used to drink this precious beverage regularly, while the poor would keep it for a sick child or a weak and elderly person. At this time, donkey milk began to be used regularly in maternity wards.
Indeed, donkeys readily breast-feed newborns that are presented directly to their udders.
Donkey milk was commercialized until the beginning of the 20th century to feed orphans, undersized infants, the sick and the elderly. In response to the increasing use of donkey milk, donkey farms were established in Italy, France, Belgium, Switzerland, and Germany. The success enjoyed in modern day by those particular farms confirms the ancient reputation of the product, and the importance of its biological properties.
Time did not affect donkey milk achievements. To this day, the scientific community continues to acknowledge the importance of this legacy. Donkey milk is an unrivalled substitute for human milk and also a natural product with rare and valuable nutritional and cosmetic properties.
Donkey milk is rich in vitamins and essential fatty acids and it is similar to human milk. It contains active anti-aging, antioxidant, and regenerative components.
It prevents some skin diseases and is also an excellent healing helper.
Donkey milk can be used as a substitute for human milk in cases of food allergies. It can be used in place of cow, goat or soymilk, or if a mother wants to feed her child with an organic and healthy food.
The lipid part of donkey milk has high levels of essential fatty acids. A fatty acid is qualified as “essential” when the body can only produce small amounts of it. These essential acids must be assimilated either through food or dietary supplements, depending on the case.
Omega-3, contained in donkey milk, is important to the heart as it contributes to the correct functioning of the cardiovascular system, helps in the fight against thrombosis (when a blood clot forms) and heart rhythm disorders. It also helps reduce the risk of a heart attack.
These essential fatty acids have important healing benefits as they are part of the developing process of the brain and the retina.
But donkey milk is not just about nutrition. It also has very attractive features for cosmetology.
It contains a lot of unsaturated fatty acids, many vitamins (A, B2, C and E) and Omegas 6 which are very valuable in cosmetology.
In cosmetology, Vitamin C plays a highly valued role as an antioxidant. It helps slow down the skin's aging process and implements its healing mechanism.
Vitamin E is known to be an antioxidant that slows skin aging and assures cell structure stability.
Donkey milk enables skin regeneration while slowing aging effects.
Vitamins give it many anti-aging properties, skin regeneration qualities, and are also active as antioxidants. Moreover, it seems that donkey milk enhances the healing process.
Minerals contained in donkey milk help clean the skin by getting rid of dead cells and making room for the living cells on the surface of the skin.
They also make it possible to induce cell growth. To insure the softness and the wellness of the skin, donkey milk contains a sufficient amount of nourishing lipids.
Fatty essential acids such as Omega 6 help the skin to absorb vitamins. They allow the skin to become more elastic and help prevent various skin diseases such as eczema and psoriasis.
The hypoallergenic properties we have been talking about make donkey milk an extra natural asset.
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Caution:
We want to warn you against some "drift" due to the fact that
the donkey's milk becomes "a product of fashion."
For some time,
you have found in some shows in some
stalls, and even in some stores products donkey milk.
Be careful, watch what you buy:
Is there a product composition on the label? (This is
a legal requirement!)
Do you know the origin of milk used to manufacture the
product?
As good as milk, it is important that other
ingredients used are of equal quality.
For a cosmetic is not composed exclusively of milk,
other ingredients are also important.
Also mind to the word "BIO": it is often
used for "marketing". Indeed, you can have a cosmetic organic label
if it contains between 90 and 95% organic ingredients. Did you know that water
is considered bio ... So a cosmetic BIO donkey milk does not mean that the milk
used is necessarily BIO ...