A small, open library of studies and statistics — on what cosmetic regulators actually ban, on the biochemistry of venom-derived actives, on how common hair loss really is, and on how much of modern medicine still begins in a plant. Every figure is sourced. Every chart is free to reproduce.
We build cosmetics around rare botanical actives, and to do that honestly we have to read the literature first. These pages are the reading, written up plainly: the regulatory tables, the peptide pharmacology, the epidemiology, the pharmacognosy. We keep them current so that journalists, students, formulators and the simply curious have one clean place to cite.
If you write about beauty, biochemistry, or health, take what you need. The charts carry a Creative Commons licence and a one-line citation. The work is the point.
Each page is a self-contained reference with charts, a methodology note, full sources, and a citation block.
The EU and the United States regulate the same jars by opposite philosophies. We counted the gap — ingredient by ingredient, decade by decade.
How a temple-viper toxin became the most-copied molecule in anti-ageing — the mechanism, the market, and what is venom versus what merely borrows its name.
How common pattern hair loss is, when it starts, how it differs by sex, and how well the standard treatments actually perform. The figures behind a quiet, near-universal experience.
Aspirin from willow, the contraceptive pill from a yam, cancer drugs from a Pacific yew. We charted four decades of FDA approvals to show how deep the botanical root runs.
All original charts on these pages are published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. You may republish them — in print or online, commercial or not — provided you credit aichabelle and link back to the source page. Underlying figures belong to the named third-party sources, which are listed in full on each study.
Writing on deadline? Each study carries an “embed this chart” snippet and a ready-made citation. If you need a higher-resolution chart, an interview, or an unpublished cut of the data, write to press@aichabelle.com.
aichabelle.com/pages/research