We talk a lot on this site about testing our own products before we sell them. It's easy to say. What it actually looks like, day to day, is less dramatic than it sounds — it's a jar of hair pack sitting in our own bathroom cabinet, used the same way we'd expect any customer to use it.
A Sunday ritual, not a miracle fix
In our house, the Herbal Hair Pack has settled into something close to a ritual. My wife mixes it with a little curd on Sunday mornings, lets it sit, and treats it as an hour she gets to herself as much as a hair care step. My mother prefers hers with plain water and a longer sit time, closer to what the usage instructions describe.
Neither of them treats it as a fix for anything specific. It's simply part of a weekly rhythm — the way some people have a skincare Sunday, we have a hair pack Sunday.
The product doesn't need to be dramatic to be worth using. Consistency is doing most of the work.
What's actually in the jar
The pack is a blend of fifteen traditional Ayurvedic ingredients — Shikakai, Reetha, Amla, Neem, Curry Leaf, Hibiscus, Bhringraj, Brahmi, and others — mixed with water, curd, or aloe vera gel into a paste, left to sit, then applied to the scalp and hair before rinsing out. It's the same formulation, same batch numbers, as what ships to customers.
Why we mention it at all
Not because we think a hair pack is a dramatic story. Because it's an honest one. When we say our own families use what we sell, we mean the unglamorous, repeated, Sunday-morning version of that — not a single transformative use, but an ordinary habit that's stuck around.
See the full ingredient list and how to use it
The complete formulation, usage instructions, and bulk ordering details for the Herbal Hair Pack.
View Herbal Hair Pack