Tanacetum Annuum Flower Oil

Bad

Irritant

No known benefits

Tanacetum Annuum Flower Oil at a glance

  • Fragrant essential oil, also known as blue tansy
  • Imparts a characteristically blue hue (thanks to its chemical component chamazulene)
  • Poses a risk of sensitizing skin and causing a cascade of damage on a deeper level
  • Alternatively, may offer aromatherapeutic benefits

Tanacetum Annuum Flower Oil description

_Tanacetum annuum_ flower oil (also known as blue tansy) is a fragrant essential oil with a sweet, herbaceous odor and characteristically blue hue. Unfortunately, due to its volatile nature, it poses a risk of sensitizing skin and causing a cascade of damage on a deeper level. Interestingly, many brands selling blue tansy skin care products claim it has the opposite effect—that it offers skin-calming, cooling effect. In reality, a cool, tingling sensation is your skin’s response signal to being irritated. The cooling comes from camphor, a significant component of this plant’s oil along with beta-pinene, a type of fragrant terpene shown to disrupt skin’s lipids (while imparting no positive benefit on healthy skin). Even if you didn’t immediately see or feel the negative effects of using _Tanacetum annuum_ flower oil, the damage is triggered under the surface, causing minor problems for your skin in the short term and more serious problems if used consistently. As such, _Tanacetum annuum_ flower oil isn’t an ingredient we recommend for topical use, even though research shows it does offer some antioxidant properties. Alternatively, _Tanacetum annuum_ oil may offer aromatherapeutic benefits, as other essential oils have evidence of anti-anxiety effects. More studies are needed to confirm, but in theory, it shows promise for this purpose. Researchers have also studied this ingredient for use an insect repellant—but the jury is still out since the results have been mixed. Fun fact: Tanacetum annuum flower oil’s blue pigment comes from its chemical component chamazulene.

Tanacetum Annuum Flower Oil references

  • Natural Product Communications, February 2021, ePublication
  • Biomolecules, November 2019, pages 1–34
  • Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, May 2019, pages 13,790-13,808
  • Ethnicity & Disease, Spring 2010, pages S78-S82

Peer-reviewed, substantiated scientific research is used to assess ingredients in this dictionary. Regulations regarding constraints, permitted concentration levels and availability vary by country and region.

Ingredient ratings

Best

Proven and supported by independent studies. Outstanding active ingredient for most skin types or concerns.

Good

Necessary to improve a formula's texture, stability, or penetration.

Average

Generally non-irritating but may have aesthetic, stability, or other issues that limit its usefulness.

Bad

There is a likelihood of irritation. Risk increases when combined with other problematic ingredients.

Worst

May cause irritation, inflammation, dryness, etc. May offer benefit in some capability but overall, proven to do more harm than good.

unknown

We couldn't find this in our ingredient dictionary. We log all missing ingredients and make continuous updates.

Not rated

We have not yet rated this ingredient because we have not had a chance to review the research on it.