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Surya
Tattoo
Surya
Tattoo is made only from plants;
contains no chemicals or henna. The
tattoos look like the real thing; no
other product on the market is like
this AND uses natural
ingredients.
It
contains no lead salts like other
temporary tattoos. It lasts
approximately 10 days. Safe for
children and adults (a patch test is
always suggested before
use).
The
main ingredient is an Amazonian plant
called Genipa americana, a
tropical fruit used by the native
people to dye their skin for
celebrations and other
rituals.
Dermatologically
tested and shown to be non-irritating
and non-allergenic. It is packaged in
recycled plastic PET and recycled
pasteboard paper. No animal testing;
happily tested on humans!
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A TOUCH OF
BEAUTY AND STYLE
The choice of
tattoo is becoming as important as choosing
clothes or a hair style: it allows us to express
ourselves and gives that touch of "something
extra".
- Surya
Tattoo's bluish black colour looks like a
real tattoo but is temporary
- 100% vegetal
and natural; no chemicals added (like lead
salts often found in other
tattoos)
- Contains no
henna.
- Dermatologically
tested and shown to be non-irritating and
non-allergenic.
- Lasts
approximately 10 days
- The main
ingredient is an Amazon plant called
Genipa americana, a tropical fruit
used by American Indians to dye their
skin.
- The plant
constituents react with the skin's
biochemical components and with the air to
produce the dark (bluish-black) colour of the
tattoo easily and without harm to the skin
appearing in its full colour within 24
hours.
- Lots of fun
for kids and adults.
Surya Tattoo
Ingredients: Genipap extract (Genipa americana),
Turmeric extract (Curcuma longa), Tea tree
essential oil, Thyme essential oil, Olive leaf
oil extract, Rosemary essential oil, Ascorbic
acid (vitamin C), Retinol palmitate (vitamin A),
Tocopheryl acetate (vitamin E), Tapioca gum
(starch from Menihot esculenta), Xantham gum,
Water.
A Note About
Henna Tattoos
Henna for hair
and body has been used for centuries in
different parts of the world, with religious and
cultural objectives. With the popularization of
tattooing, henna is now used on rather a large
scale. But since it gives an orange-like colour
different from real skin tattoos, many
tattooists mix other products to reach a colour
nearer to black. Some of these products are
harmful to the skin and may damage the health.
In the United States and Canada, there is a
national campaign to banish this type of
tattooing because it has caused severe cases of
burning and allergy. For this reason, the FDA
has banned the use of henna for the skin because
companies were using substances like PPD
(paraphenylenediamine) in their tattoo products.