Does the Bird Poop Facial Really Work?

by Right Brain on November 27, 2012

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Meredith must know…A couple of years ago I heard a lot of buzz about the Geisha Facial that uses bird poo to improve your complexion. What’s the science behind this? 

The Right Brain responds: 

I know that a lot of beauty claims are bullish*t but this one is literally birdsh*t! Nonetheless, that hasn’t stopped modern spas from adopting this ancient Japanese tradition. Shizuka New York, for example, charges you $180 for the privilege of having bird poop rubbed on your face. Supposedly the poo brightens skin and evens out your complexion. Does it really work? Here’s the scientific scoop on bird poop.

How a bird poop facial is made

First, you get some nightingales (specifically Japanese bush warblers). Why nightingales and not other birds, you ask? Because they have a short digestive tract which allegedly allows their poop to maintain more of the chemicals that are good for your skin. Then you feed the birds a special diet of organic seeds. The seeds work their way through the birds and what comes out the other end is called “uguisu no fun” in Japanese. Yes that’s right. The actual Japanese expression for nightingale crap that you rub all over your face includes the words “no fun.” Ironic, ain’t it?  Next, the poop is scraped from the cages (and you thought YOU had a crappy job) and then sanitized with an ultraviolet light before being dried and ground into a fine white powder. This powder is reconstituted and used as a facial cream.

What does bird poop do for your skin?

Supposedly bird poop contains a high concentration of urea and guanine. Urea is one of the components of the skin’s Natural Moisturizing Factor (NMF for short) and it’s added to a number of skin creams to improve moisturization. It really works but you certainly don’t need bird poop to get a good dose of urea! Plus, urea has to be left on the skin to provide a moisturization benefit. Leaving it for a little while and then washing it off does no good. Guanine is a naturally iridescent material that can make you look sparkly. But, again, it only works when left on your face. It doesn’t have any lightening or brightening properties other than being glittery. At least one source claims that uguisu no fun contains an enzyme that lightens skin. But we could find no evidence of this at all. Most sites report that guanine is an enzyme which it’s not.

Historically Geishas used bird poop to bleach stains from their kimonos. This makes sense since the bird droppings could have a high pH due to ammonia which could lighten the kinds of pigments used as fabric dyes. It won’t, however, remove melanin which is the pigment in skin that gives it it’s color.

The Beauty Brains bottom line

Instead of wasting your money on a bird poop facial buy a good moisturizer with urea. And if want to get rid of acne scars or dark spots use retinol or a skin lightener that’s proven to work.

Image credit: http://img.fotocommunity.com/

References:

http://www.body4real.co.uk/product.php?productid=18065&js=y

http://health.howstuffworks.com/skin-care/beauty/skin-treatments/geisha-facial.htm

Nster.com

{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

Sue - MakeupMew November 27, 2012 at 9:55 am

I wouldn’t be surprised. We have men are consuming flying squirrel poop to improve testosterone.

Angela Hall November 27, 2012 at 12:08 pm

I don’t care if it makes me look like Elizabeth Taylor circa 1957. I’m not putting bird poopies on my face.

Rozy November 27, 2012 at 6:38 pm

Ive actually wondered the same thing and they sell it for a pretty high pricetag over the web.

Pink Nerd November 28, 2012 at 7:28 pm

I would never even THINK about putting bird poop on my face! What would your face smell like after?

body mania November 28, 2012 at 9:32 pm

Putting bird poo on my face? No way, I would rather go with alternative methods as per your recommendation.I have seen many women attain good results simply by using good moisturizers and natural skin lighteners.

Tiffany Martin December 11, 2012 at 6:48 pm

We use “gross” things every day without thinking about it, though I’m not surprised that there are people out there who will freak out over nothing. I’d use a product that is sanitized and proven to work. This particular one sounds like it’s not proven to do what it claims.

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