Turn an old lotion or body wash into a body scrub
by Jen
So you bought a lotion or body wash, and after a while you found something that smelled nicer, or the seasons changed and your skin needed something different. Now you have this half-used cosmetic product that’s destined for the landfill.
Instead, make it into a body scrub. Lotions make a rich, moisturizing body scrub while body washes make a cleansing one. These can actually be much better than a lot of store-bought body scrubs because you get to control scent and texture.
The basic rule is to mix a tablespoon of your exfoliant per cup of lotion or body wash. The exfoliants you might want to try include:
- Ground walnuts or almonds. If you have a coffee grinder or food processor that can grind these up into tiny little specks, you can do this yourself (stop grinding before it turns into a paste). Otherwise, look for ground walnuts or almonds as a pre-sold food ingredient at grocery or health food stores. This makes for a fairly intense scrub which may be rough on some sensitive skin people, but is awesome on rough and dry skin.
- Ground oatmeal. Probably the best choice for sensitive skin. Oatmeal makes for a rather fine scrub – still very effective, but gentle, and with all the soothing anti-itch, anti-redness properties of oatmeal.
- Ground apricot pits. Another rather intense scrub. Be very careful to get all of it ground up very fine – watch for sharp pieces that don’t get trimmed down to size.
- Corn meal. Another fairly gentle option for people with sensitive skin.
- Coarse salt. A really popular as a body scrub ingredient right now. It can be drying, so it’s only recommended for oily skin.
- Coarse raw sugar. Another really popular ingredient which works for combination and dry skin. The sugar polishes without dehydrating.
- Old coffee grounds. This is a nice bit of recycling – keep old coffee grounds to use in scrubs. The caffeine smooths cellulite as well as polishing skin.
That’s really all you need to do – add your ingredients together, and have fun. But if you want, you can also add:
- Vitamins. Try a couple of capsules of E or crush tablets of A or C, and mix that up in your scrub.
- Essential oils. It’s important to do research rather than just add what smells nice. For example, lavender essential oil is drying – great as an acne spot treatment, but not ideal for dry skin. Start with just a drop or two – you’ll be shocked how much scent some oils provide. Vanilla extract is a great choice, too.
Related posts:
- Egg Whites to Treat Acne
- Oils for skin care
- Make homemade body scrubs with oil and sugar
- Recipe for low-sugar, low-fat oatmeal cookies
- 15 ways to save money on your beauty routine

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June 9th, 2008 at 6:18 pm
The coffee grounds are a great tip! This is such a coincidental post to come across; I just went through a whole bag of moisturizers (gifts) that I never use and couldn’t think of a place to put them that wouldn’t be just moving them around and never using them. Now they’re useful again!
I’ve come across quite a few recipes that say that this oil is good for blah and that oil is good for bleh… Is there a good list you know of that lays it all out for you? Just curious.
June 10th, 2008 at 10:26 am
I’ll do some research and make a post about it today or tomorrow, Eve! Please check back for it.
June 11th, 2008 at 2:32 am
[...] a recent article about making a new body scrub out of an old body wash or lotion, I mentioned in passing that you could always add some essential oils for scent. Eve asked if I [...]
June 24th, 2008 at 1:56 pm
awesome idea! Thanks!
July 10th, 2008 at 3:00 am
[...] say, from the kitchen to the other room where the houseplants need watered. They’re ideal for mixing up your own body washes and scrubs (in fact, rejected shampoo is perfect for turning into a [...]
July 26th, 2008 at 2:27 am
[...] for skin care – This one was by request from Eve, who asked if I knew oils and which skin types and skincare issues they were good for. I [...]