Noun
shea butter (usually uncountable, plural shea butters)
A slightly yellowish or ivory-colored natural fat extracted from fruit of the shea tree (Vitellaria paradoxa) by crushing and boiling, widely used in cosmetics as a moisturizer and an emollient, as a cooking oil in West Africa, and sometimes used in the chocolate industry as a substitute for cocoa butter.
I also have back up products that work for my hair type but I only use on occasion like shea butter vanilla mint conditioner, shea moisture coconut and hibiscus smoothie,beautiful curls reviving tonic, and my own mixture of shea/coconut/aloe vera. Source: Internet
If you’ve ever tried Cuticle Care you likely already know the answer to this question: it’s the shea butter! Source: Internet
It only has 6 super clean ingredients (Macadamia, coconut, and Marula oils, vanilla, shea butter and corn starch) and it is never tested on animals. Source: Internet
Keratin peptide, hyaluronic acid, shea butter and vitamins A, C & E, argan oil, jojoba oil, sunflower seed oil, camellia oil, honeysuckle extract, grape seed extract and green tea extract. Source: Internet
She swears by ("I cannot live without his Pure-Fro Moisture Spray",) as well as shea butter and the LOC method. Source: Internet
Smooth and soothe lips with moisturizing olive oil, shea butter, avocado butter, aloe, and antioxidant-packed white tea. Source: Internet