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Real answers about perfume oils, natural kohl, and why we make them without alcohol or lead.
That fade is the alcohol evaporating. In alcohol-based sprays, the alcohol carries the scent up fast — which is why it smells strong at first — then disappears with it, often within an hour or two. Sandy Souk's oil perfumes use no alcohol at all: the oil carrier holds the fragrance against your skin and releases it slowly through body heat, so you get 6–12 hours of real wear instead of a burst that vanishes by lunch.
Alcohol-based sprays typically last 3–5 hours because the alcohol evaporates quickly; oil perfumes last 6–12+ hours because the oil base holds fragrance close to the skin instead of releasing it all at once. If you've ever had to reapply your perfume by midday, a Sandy Souk oil perfume is built to carry you through a full day on one application.
Many mainstream perfumes rely on synthetic fragrance compounds and alcohol that can irritate sensitive people — roughly a third of people report near-immediate reactions to synthetic fragrance, and it's a well-documented migraine trigger. Sandy Souk's perfume oils are alcohol-free and made with natural oils, which is exactly why customers who'd given up on wearing perfume tell us they can finally wear scent again without paying for it later.
Generally, yes. Alcohol is drying and can irritate skin with repeated use, while an oil base actually moisturizes as it scents. If your skin gets red, tight, or itchy after spraying perfume, switching to an alcohol-free oil perfume is one of the simplest fixes — and it's the reason every Sandy Souk fragrance is formulated in oil, not alcohol, from the start.
Warm a small amount between your fingertip and dab — don't rub — it onto pulse points: wrists, behind the ears, the base of your throat, and inner elbows, where body heat releases the scent gradually through the day. Because Sandy Souk oils are concentrated, one or two dabs is all it takes to wear beautifully from morning into evening.
It can, if applied directly to delicate fabrics like silk. The easy fix: apply Sandy Souk oil perfume to your skin at pulse points and let your clothing pick up the scent naturally as you move, or dab it onto an inner seam or hem first if you want it on fabric. A small precaution, and one dab goes a long way.
Less than you'd think. Because oil perfumes are far more concentrated than sprays, a single small dab per pulse point is usually plenty. Start light with your Sandy Souk bottle — you can always add a touch more, but that concentration also means one bottle lasts you significantly longer than a spray ever would.
It depends entirely on what's inside, and it's worth checking before you buy. Traditional kohl made with galena (lead sulfide) can expose you to genuinely dangerous lead levels — which is exactly why Sandy Souk's Moroccan Kohl Powder is made with natural antimony sulfide (ithmid) instead, and listed 100% lead-free on every bottle.
Some does, and more often than people realize — a 2025 investigation found that over half of the kohl and kajal products tested in the U.S. exceeded the FDA's lead limit. Sandy Souk's Moroccan Kohl Powder uses natural antimony sulfide (ithmid), not galena, and is listed 100% lead-free — always check the ingredient list on any kohl before it goes near your eyes, ours included.
Traditional kohl is a mineral-based powder applied with a stick; modern eyeliner is usually a pencil made from cosmetic waxes and synthetic colorants. Sandy Souk's kohl follows the traditional Moroccan method — hand-made with olive or argan oil, date pit powder, and natural plant powders like iris and rose — a formula closer to centuries of tradition than anything you'll find in a drugstore pencil.
Ignore words like "natural" or "traditional" on their own — they guarantee nothing, and some of the most dangerous kohl on the market is marketed exactly that way. Check the actual ingredient list for galena, lead, or vague "kohl stone"/"surma powder," and look for full transparency — which is exactly what you'll find listed on every Sandy Souk kohl bottle.
Any product used near the waterline carries some infection risk if it's contaminated or applied with a dirty tool — true of any eyeliner, not just kohl. Use a clean applicator each time and avoid sharing your stick, and choose a kohl that's hand-made in small batches with natural ingredients, like Sandy Souk's, rather than mass-produced with unknown fillers.
No — this is one of the more important myths to bust. "Natural" and "herbal" labeling says nothing about lead content; some of the riskiest kohl on the market uses that exact language. What actually matters is the ingredient list, which is why Sandy Souk states ours plainly: natural antimony sulfide (ithmid), date pit powder, olive or argan oil, and iris and rose powders — no galena, no lead, no guesswork.