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Flamingo Body Hair Removal Cream -- 6.76 fl oz


Flamingo Body Hair Removal Cream
  • Our price: $9.59

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Flamingo Body Hair Removal Cream -- 6.76 fl oz

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Flamingo Body Hair Removal Cream Description

  • Quickly and Gently Removes Body Hair - Even on Sensitive Skin
  • Keeps Legs, Arms, Stomach, & Bikini Line Smooth Up To 7 Days
  • Keeps Underarms Smooth Up To 6 Days
  • Safe For Sensitive Skin
  • Subtle Iris & Suede Scent
  • Dermatologist Tested

Experience pain-free hair removal with Flamingo’s gentle body hair removal cream. Designed for sensitive skin, it removes hair quickly and easily. Includes a spatula for touch-free application and step-by-step instructions for smooth results.

 

Scent: Forget overwhelmingly fragranced hair removal creams of the past -ours has a subtle, elevated iris and suede scent


Directions

How to Use

 

Spot test. Before every use, always check for the reaction of your skin by applying Body Hair Removal Cream to a small part of the area you're treating, following the instructions for use. If after 24 hours there is no adverse reaction, you can go ahead with the application. Irritation or allergic reaction may occur with some people, even after prior use without adverse reaction.

 

Use the spatula tool to apply an even, thick, opaque layer on clean, dry skin. Make sure the hair is covered completely. Don't rub the product in—just spread it enough that it covers the hair and skin. After 5 minutes, remove a small test area with the spatula. If hair doesn't come off easily, leave on longer. Don’t exceed 10 minutes total. If you feel any discomfort or burning sensation during application, remove cream immediately. Remove the rest of the cream gently with the spatula, against the grain of hair growth. Thoroughly rinse with water.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Ingredients: Water/aqua/eau, cetearyl alcohol, urea, isopropyl myristate, potassium thioglycolate, calcium hydroxide, fragrance/parfum, bisabolol, butyrospermum parkii (shea) butter, glycerin, sodium cetearyl sulfate, hydroxycitronellal.
Warnings

Do not use on head, face, eyes, eyebrows, nose, ears, chest, nipples or surrounding area, perianal or genital area, or on any other body part. Do not apply to wounds, spots, cracked, irritated or burnt skin or to skin which has previously had an adverse reaction to hair removal cream. Avoid sunbathing, swimming, or using deodorants or other alcohol-based, or perfumed products for 24 hours before and after use. Always wait 72 hours between applications. This product contains thioglycolate & alkali. Do not ingest. If swallowed: get immediate medical attention and show product packaging. Do not use if you suffer from any medical condition that may be affected by compromised skin. Contact a doctor before use if you suffer from any skin related disorder, circulatory issues or diabetes. Do not use on compromised skin, or when undergoing Glycolic Acid or other dermatological treatments. Avoid contact with the eyes. Rinse eyes immediately if product comes into contact with them and seek medical attention. If irritation occurs, discontinue use immediately. For external use only. This product is not for kids. Keep out of the reach of children.

 

If you get the cream on your fingers while applying, wash your hands thoroughly afterwards. If cream gets on skin area other than the intended area to remove hair, wash immediately.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
View printable version Print Page

To Shave or Not to Shave? Why the Choice is Finally Yours

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]It’s a kind of crazy, the double standard of body hair that plagues the sexes. But the modern mandate that “women must be hairless” is shockingly recent. Historians point out that humans have been removing hair in various ways for millennia, but the current expectation that women remove almost everything below the eyebrows really took off in the early 20th century. Focused View of Woman's Hands Holding Pink Razor to Represent Concept of Body Hair Removal Choice Once sleeveless dresses hit department-store racks in the 1910s, advertisers spotted an opportunity: newly exposed underarms suddenly became a “problem” in need of a solution. Gillette released the first women’s razor in 1915, accompanied by marketing that framed visible hair as embarrassing, unfeminine, even unclean. Shaving as a feminine necessity was a commercial invention that stuck. By the 1940s, wartime nylon shortages meant bare legs were in. Magazines doubled down on the message. The postwar era layered on pin-up aesthetics, bikinis, miniskirts and Hollywood’s airbrushed ideal. By the 1960s, the expectation had ballooned: a “well-groomed” woman was presumed hairless from ankles to armpits to bikini line. And while the counterculture briefly pushed back, the ’80s and ’90s brought the Brazilian wax, laser hair removal and a quiet, insidious pressure to remove more hair, not less. The hairless ideal is a commercial project reinforced by fashion, film, and decades of beauty marketing that effectively trained women to view their own body hair as an anathema to their own femininity.

Should you stop shaving your body hair?

The past few years have pushed people to question everything, including beauty norms, wellness rituals, gender binaries and identity politics. Gender is more fluid. Makeup is optional. Body positivity is a thing. And the long-standing expectation that women must be hairless is losing its grip. On TikTok, armpit-hair diaries pull in millions of views. In fashion, runways and campaigns have finally stopped pretending women are naturally hairless by default. And in pop culture, the shift has been pronounced as well. One of the earliest (and most unlikely) champions of visible body hair was the women’s razor brand Billie, which, in 2018, became the first to show real body hair in an ad. Are you starting to wonder if you should you stop shaving? Keep shaving? It’s completely up to you. Your hair, your choice. Here’s a clear look at the actual pros and cons of body hair.

Pros of not shaving your body hair

Body hair is functional

  • Underarms & groin: Hair helps reduce friction, wick sweat and disperse scent.
  • Pubic hair: Provides a barrier that can protect delicate skin from irritation, microtears and STIs transmitted through skin-to-skin contact (not all, but some).
  • Leg/arm hair: Offers mild protection and sensory feedback.
Is it “more hygienic” to remove it? No. Dermatologists note the opposite: shaving or waxing can cause micro-injury, irritation, as well as folliculitis, ingrowns and infections.

Your sensitive skin will thank you

Razor burn, bumps, itchiness, hyperpigmentation—some people’s skin just does not love shaving. Going natural means you get to skip the inflammatory aftershocks entirely. And if you’ve ever dealt with regrowth itch or razor burn before a beach day, you already know: sometimes the “finished” look costs more than it’s worth.

Your wallet will thank you

  • razors: $15+ every few weeks
  • waxing: $70–$120 per session
  • laser: $300–$2,000 per area
Not shaving is basically free. A survey conducted by the American Laser Centers?? in 2008 shows that an average woman spends from $10,000 to $23,000 to remove body hair over a lifetime.

Gives you a break from performative grooming

Plenty of women describe not shaving as a kind of quiet, private rebellion. It affords the freedom from being “on display,” relief from grooming anxiety and the novelty of seeing your own body unmodified.

Cons of going natural

Social pushback

Even with the cultural shift, women with visible body hair still get stares, comments, DMs and unsolicited opinions. As ridiculous as that sounds, conspicuous body hair does require a thick skin.

Odor retention

Hair itself doesn’t cause odor, but it can trap sweat and bacteria. If you’re prone to stronger body odor, the adjustment period can take some tweaking: better soaps, breathable fabrics, maybe dietary shifts or stronger deodorant.

Aerodynamics

Some people genuinely prefer the feeling of smooth skin, especially for activities such as running, cycling, yoga and swimming.

Pubic hair snafus

Pubic hair can tangle, snag or feel uncomfortable for some. Movement from clothing or activities causes hair to rub and knot.

Personal aesthetics

You may simply prefer the aesthetics of shaving. This is the part body hair fundamentalists tend to ignore: sometimes people shave because they like it. Pure preference counts as a valid reason to modify your hair.

To shave or not shave

There’s no universal prescription here, because the question is more about agency than hair. The current shift isn’t urging women to abandon razors en masse; it’s challenging the idea that a hairless body is the neutral baseline from which all femininity must begin. Once you see that expectation clearly, it becomes easier to ask whether the ritual still belongs to you. For some, shaving is genuinely a form of care: the sensory pleasure of smooth skin, the comfort during exercise, the small act of order in a chaotic world. There’s nothing regressive about liking the look or the feel. If you do want to shave, it is quick, and low-risk. And dermatologists consistently say shaving is fine, especially compared to harsher methods like waxing, sugaring or laser, which can cause burns or scarring if done improperly. For others, shaving reveals itself as something inherited rather than chosen. It’s a chore absorbed in adolescence, reinforced by peers, normalized to the point where not shaving feels transgressive. Pausing, even briefly, can be clarifying. You discover quickly whether the hair bothers you, or whether the discomfort comes from imagining someone else’s reaction. If the fear of social judgment looms large, that’s not a personal weakness. it’s evidence of how effectively beauty norms police women’s bodies. Hair becomes a surprisingly honest barometer of how much of your appearance you curate for yourself versus an imagined audience. In the end, the most radical outcome isn’t joining the “hairy” camp or the “smooth” camp. It’s recognizing that both are legitimate. Ultimately you get to choose what to remove, what to keep, and why—without apology, without performance, and without assuming that one option is inherently superior. Make the decision for yourself, not because you are wanting anyone else’s approval. If you’re unsure, you can always let the hair grow for a week and see what you learn.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_text_separator title="Featured Products" border_width="2"][vc_row_inner equal_height="yes" content_placement="middle" gap="35"][vc_column_inner width="1/3"][vc_single_image image="191463" img_size="full" alignment="center" onclick="custom_link" img_link_target="_blank" css=".vc_custom_1767104265249{padding-right: 7% !important;padding-left: 7% !important;}" link="https://www.vitacost.com/vitabath-cleanse-shave-foaming-oil-lavender-chamomile"][/vc_column_inner][vc_column_inner width="1/3"][vc_single_image image="191461" img_size="full" alignment="center" onclick="custom_link" img_link_target="_blank" css=".vc_custom_1767104284836{padding-right: 7% !important;padding-left: 7% !important;}" link="https://www.vitacost.com/flamingo-womens-moisture-plus-razor-kit-fig"][/vc_column_inner][vc_column_inner width="1/3"][vc_single_image image="191462" img_size="full" alignment="center" onclick="custom_link" img_link_target="_blank" css=".vc_custom_1767104301143{padding-right: 7% !important;padding-left: 7% !important;}" link="https://www.vitacost.com/kiss-my-face-4-in-1-moisture-shave-lotion-cool-mint"][/vc_column_inner][/vc_row_inner][/vc_column][/vc_row]
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