I am always looking for ways to combine aromatherapy and beekeeping, so a Beauty Mask Workshop at Homemade London was a perfect evening for an aromatherapy beekeeper! I like to make honey masks with essential oils, but wanted to learn more about using natural mineral clays with my recipes.
Homemade London is a beautiful salon at the heart of the West End that specialises in luxurious and indulgent experiences such as parties and workshops. A visit promises you will work with the highest quality materials, fabrics and ingredients to create objects of desire, beautifully packaged to take home. The classes are also social, so you are treated to a glass of wine and nibbles or afternoon tea while you work.
All the best beauty secrets are locked away in nature and the Beauty Mask Workshop revealed a few gems. The evening was hosted by the owner of Homemade London, Nicola Barron, who welcomed us with sparkly pink fizz and French Fancies while we enjoyed the salon’s pretty window dressing and creative haberdashery.
Nicola started the workshop by introducing the properties of various mineral clays and why they are good for different skin types. The workshop used three clays that possess highly active mineral properties such as deep cleansing, purifying, exfoliating and refining:
- Rhassoul, or Moroccan beauty clay: a unique clay, sourced from beneath the Atlas Mountains of Morocco, that deep cleanses, detoxifies and exfoliates while also improving skin texture. It is a powerful-acting clay suitable even for sensitive skins.
- Red argiletz clay: a naturally red-pigmented clay that is beneficial for dry, sensitive and irritated skins.
- Kaolin, or white china clay: softening and soothing, this clay is suitable for all skin types and it gently balances the stronger drawing properties of red and Rhassoul clays.

Clockwise from top left (black bowl): kaolin white china clay, Moroccan rhassoul clay, and red argiletz clay.
Our homemade beauty masks used other natural ingredients that you might find in your fridge or kitchen cupboard, such as strawberries, bananas and double cream that have active properties good for your skin. For example, both strawberries and cream are mildly exfoliating, while strawberries are toning and cream is nourishing. ‘It is important to use double cream,’ said Nicola. ‘Although you can use Greek yoghurt instead.’
As we mashed bowls of fresh strawberries and banana, Nicola explained how to make our beauty masks: ‘Choose two or three clays with properties that best suit your skin’s needs, then mix about half a teaspoon of each with a little water or small portion of fruit and cream.’ Naturally, we chose fruit and cream because it sounded much more decadent!

Adding berries to a homemade facial mask have a refining and tightening effect on your skin. I was in charge of mashing strawberries.
We each experimented with three different beauty masks, choosing combinations such as red and white clay with banana, and rhassoul, red and white clay with strawberry. My favourite combination was rhassoul and white clay with strawberry and cream, which felt so luxurious on my skin. Using this beauty mask at home could easily recreate the experience of a Moroccan hammam in my bathroom!

Ingredients for a personalised beauty mask using rhassoul and kaolin clays and mashed strawberry; just add a little cream.
Nicola recommended adding a little white clay to every combination, because it both lessens and balances the stronger drawing properties of the red and rhassoul clays. She also warned that the red clay might leave you looking a little orange! We patch tested all our beauty masks on the back of our hands for about five minutes, which is good practice before using any new beauty product, homemade or otherwise.
When at home, Nicola advised using a beauty mask once a week and wearing for just 10 minutes, because it is not good for your skin to let the clay dry out.
As a bonus, we created a homemade lime-and-sugar body scrub using a mixture of brown Demerara and white sugars and olive oil, fragranced with lime essential oil.
We got to take home a jar containing a mixture of mineral clays of our choice, which will keep for about 18 months (if stored correctly out of direct heat, light and moisture) and should make about 12–15 applications of beauty masks. The great thing was how versatile it was to make our own masks, ‘We like to empower people to go away with knowledge and a few good ingredients to create for themselves,’ said Nicola. It’s a good philosophy. Nicola buys her clays, including the amazing Moroccan rhassoul beauty clay, from Baldwins in London.
We were given handouts with helpful descriptions of the different properties of each clay and of other natural ingredients such as honey and avocado, so we could continue to experiment with different combinations at home.
Homemade London hold all sorts of arts and craft workshops like sewing and perfumery. I’ll be trying out a few more this summer – bee-patterned cushions, perhaps…
It was a really fun evening and I got to meet two other lovely ladies interested in natural skin care. Check out Francesca’s blog and Kristina’s blog for more homemade ideas and beauty recipes. After we had finished making our masks, there was little to do but chat and eat cake.
Honey, lavender and geranium clay beauty mask
How do beauty masks combine aromatherapy and beekeeping? Swop strawberry and cream for honey and add a drop or two of essential oils, and you have a beauty mask fit for an aromatherapy beekeeper. When I got home, I tried this combination:
- 1/2 tsp rhassoul clay
- 1/2 tsp white clay
- 1 tsp honey
- 1 drop lavender essential oil
- 1 drop geranium essential oil
Honey has antiseptic properties and is nourishing and softening to skin. I was lucky to use the honey from my hive, which smelt lovely in this recipe. (Thanks to Queen Rosemary and her hardworking ladies!) Lavender and geranium essential oils blended in equal quantities have a wonderfully balancing action on skin sebum, making the mask suitable for all skin types.
After patch testing on the back of my hand, I made a second application for my face and patted onto cleansed, dry skin, leaving for 10 minutes. I rinsed off with warm water, and went to bed with my skin feeling amazingly soft, smooth and rejuvenated. I’ll be surprised if my bees recognise me when we open our hives for the shook swarm next week!
I want you to make me beautiful!! 🙂
You are already beautiful, Deborah! Do try these beauty masks, they are such fun. Perhaps a herbs-and-flower beauty party in your garden with afternoon tea!
Only if you and Emily make the trip!! 🙂
We better start saving our flying miles! 🙂
September is the most beautiful month. My dahlias will be blooming!
Towards the end of the beekeeping season – perfect!
You can help me harvest! Although I probably won’t… 🙂 I like to let my ladies keep their honey.
Your ladies are lucky to have such a kind beekeeper! I think it’s lovely to leave the bees their honey, it surely must be healthier for them! 🙂
Great post Emma 😀 It was a lovely little workshop 😀
Thanks, Kristina. I enjoyed reading your post – happy that you used honey with your Sunday beauty mask! Perhaps will see you again at another Homemade workshop 🙂
I love honey 🙂 Maybe see you at the perume making workshop 🙂
Reblogged this on Homemade Wellbeing and commented:
Emma is a bee keeper and aromatherapist. I met her at the Homemade London face mask making workshop. Check out her Honey, lavender and geranium clay beauty mask! Sounds wonderful, I will have to try it! Thanks Emma for the recipe!
Thank you so much, Kristina. I have been enjoying reading your blog also and am looking forward to trying your recipes, they all look amazing!
Yet another reason to come to London! Homemade London looks like the sort of place I could spend hours in. I love the sound of the mask you made with lavender & geranium. I also love using honey in my clay foot masks…so soothing and nourishing. Thank you for this lovely post. I’m off to check out the other 2 blogs now…
You must have the most beautiful feet! I love using peppermint essential oil in sugar scrubs for my feet in summer, so cooling and lovely! As a Londoner born and bred, I do feel lucky to live here, but there are so many other great places in the world to visit too – and all probably with better weather 🙂 I hope you enjoy Kristina’s and Francesca’s blogs too!
Loved the description of the clay masks. I just need to find a local source of the clays. Maybe on line.
Thank you, they felt lovely to use. The 100% volcanic mineral clay from Baldwins is expensive, but you need only use a little per mask (about half a teaspoon of two or three clays) so it should last a while. Not sure if they do international deliveries, but then you would pay shipping too… perhaps best to find a more local supplier.
You may still find their website useful for reference on what ingredients to look for from other suppliers and for detailed descriptions of clays and their uses, like rhassoul: http://www.baldwins.co.uk/Beauty-Products/Rhassoul/Rhassoul-Volcanic-Mineral-Clay-200g/14937/789
Pingback: A chemistry class in perfume-making at Homemade London | Miss Apis Mellifera