Deyga Baby Butter: A Complete Guide to the Unscented Handcrafted Five-Ingredient Body Butter for Your Baby's Most Sensitive Skin

Deyga Baby Butter: A Complete Guide to the Unscented Handcrafted Five-Ingredient Body Butter for Your Baby's Most Sensitive Skin

There is a particular moment that almost every Indian parent — whether in Mumbai or Edison, in Hyderabad or Toronto, in Pune or San Jose — recognises. It happens around the third week of bringing a newborn home. The skin that looked impossibly soft on day one has begun to flake gently around the cheeks. There are tiny dry patches on the elbows. The thighs feel slightly rough where the diaper rubs. The back of the head, against the cot sheet, has developed faint pink marks. None of it is alarming, exactly — but it is the first sign that the protective bath that the baby spent nine months in is over, that the skin is now adapting to air, fabric, sunlight, soap, and the dry indoor heating or air conditioning of a modern home, and that whatever you put on this skin from now on will accumulate over years and years of daily contact across the most fragile skin barrier the human body ever has.

This is why baby skincare is one of the most quietly fraught categories in the entire personal care market. Adult skincare can be aggressive — exfoliants, retinoids, peels — and the skin recovers. Baby skin cannot. The newborn stratum corneum is approximately 30% thinner than adult skin, the barrier function is incomplete for the first several months, the sebaceous glands have not yet matured, and the sweat-and-thermoregulation system is still calibrating. The skin is also dramatically more permeable: substances applied topically to a baby cross the barrier and enter circulation more efficiently than they do in adult skin, which is why even small amounts of synthetic fragrance, harsh preservatives, or known sensitisers can cause cumulative effects that are not visible from week to week but are very visible by the end of the first year. The decision of which baby moisturiser sits on the changing-table shelf is, in a real sense, a decision about which ingredients will spend the next several years of daily contact with this developing skin.

Deyga's Baby Butter, available on Swadesiicart at $15.54 for the 40-gram tin (down from the regular price of $21.14, a saving of approximately 26%), is one of the most thoughtfully simple baby moisturisers in the entire Indian natural-skincare category. The full ingredient list is just five items: Organic Shea Butter, Mango Butter, Almond Oil, Chamomile Oil, and Jojoba Oil. There is no synthetic fragrance, no parabens, no phthalates, no PEGs, no mineral oil, no synthetic colours, no preservatives — none of the long ingredient stacks that dominate mainstream baby lotion shelves. It is genuinely unscented, handcrafted by Deyga (a small-batch natural skincare brand based in Tamil Nadu, India, that has earned a strong reputation in the Indian natural-skincare community for its uncomplicated, ingredient-honest formulations). The result is a body butter that does one thing exceptionally well: it nourishes and moisturises the most delicate skin of the most delicate humans, without asking that skin to deal with anything else.

 

Newborn and Infant Skin Biology: Why "Gentle" Has to Mean Something Specific

Understanding what makes a baby moisturiser appropriate — beyond the marketing word "gentle" — requires understanding what exactly is different about the skin it is being applied to. Newborn and infant skin is not just "smaller adult skin." It is structurally and functionally distinct, and these differences matter for every product decision a parent makes:

       Approximately 30% thinner stratum corneum: The outermost protective layer of the skin in a newborn is significantly thinner than in adult skin and continues to thicken throughout the first year of life. This thinness means anything applied topically penetrates more readily, which is the primary reason ingredient choice matters more on a baby than on an adult.

       Higher surface-area-to-body-weight ratio: A newborn has roughly three times the relative surface-area-to-body-weight ratio of an adult, meaning that any substance absorbed through the skin contributes a proportionally larger systemic exposure. This is why the cumulative ingredient load matters in baby skincare in a way it does not in adult skincare.

       Immature barrier function: The lipid bilayers that hold moisture in adult skin and keep external substances out are not fully developed in newborns. The barrier matures over the first 6 to 12 months, during which time skin is more prone to dryness, transepidermal water loss, and reactive sensitivity to topical substances.

       Limited sebaceous activity: The sebaceous glands that produce protective skin oils are largely inactive in babies until adolescence (with brief exceptions like newborn acne in the first few weeks). This means baby skin cannot "self-moisturise" the way adult skin can, which is why daily topical moisturisation is genuinely beneficial — and why what is applied needs to actually work as a lipid-replenishing layer.

       Slightly higher skin pH initially: Newborn skin pH is mildly alkaline at birth and gradually shifts toward the slightly acidic pH (4.5 to 5.5) of mature skin over the first weeks. Aggressive cleansing or alkaline products can disrupt this transition and contribute to irritation.

       Heightened sensitivity to fragrance and dyes: Synthetic fragrance is one of the most common causes of contact dermatitis at any age, and the immature barrier of baby skin makes it especially sensitive. The American Academy of Pediatrics, the European Society of Paediatric Dermatology, and most paediatric dermatologists recommend choosing fragrance-free products for infants whenever possible.

       Reduced ability to communicate discomfort: An adult can stop using a product that stings, burns, or causes itching after one application. A baby cannot. Mild irritation can persist undetected for days or weeks before manifesting as visible eczema, which is why erring on the side of the simplest possible ingredient list is the most common paediatric dermatology recommendation.

Against this anatomical and developmental reality, the standard mainstream baby lotion shelf — products with 25-plus ingredient lists, synthetic fragrance compounds, multiple preservative systems, and chemical thickeners and stabilisers — is significantly more compromised than the marketing leads parents to assume. The case for a five-ingredient, fragrance-free, naturally formulated baby butter is not a marketing romance; it is a direct response to the specific characteristics of the skin it is being applied to.

Inside the Deyga Baby Butter: A Functional Walkthrough of Each of the Five Ingredients

Deyga's formulation philosophy is one of the most disciplined in the Indian natural-skincare category: build only with the ingredients that genuinely contribute to the product's intended function, in their most usable natural form, and stop there. The Baby Butter contains exactly five ingredients, each of which has been used on infant skin across multiple cultural traditions for decades or centuries, and each of which plays a defined role in the formulation:

Organic Shea Butter (Butyrospermum parkii)

Shea butter is the foundational base of the formulation and is one of the most extensively studied skin emollients in the natural cosmetics literature. Extracted from the nut of the shea tree native to West Africa, raw shea butter is composed of approximately 85 to 90% triglycerides — primarily oleic acid, stearic acid, linoleic acid, and palmitic acid — alongside a naturally occurring fraction of unsaponifiables (vitamin E, vitamin A precursors, triterpene alcohols, and cinnamic acid esters) that contribute genuine biological activity beyond simple lipid replacement. The fatty acid profile of shea butter mimics the natural lipids of human skin closely enough that it integrates seamlessly into the developing barrier of infant skin, replenishing the lipid bilayers that are still maturing in the first year of life.

The "organic" specification matters here. Conventional shea butter can be processed with hexane solvents or refined in ways that destroy the unsaponifiable fraction and leave residual processing chemicals. Organic, cold-pressed, unrefined shea butter — which is what Deyga uses — preserves the full vitamin and triterpene content and contains no solvent residues. For a product that will be applied daily to the most permeable skin in a household, this distinction is meaningful.

Mango Butter (Mangifera indica)

Mango butter is the second emollient base in the formulation and contributes properties that complement shea butter rather than duplicating them. Extracted from the kernel of the mango fruit, mango butter has a slightly higher melting point than shea butter and a smoother, less grainy texture, which is part of why combining the two creates a body butter that spreads beautifully without the slight graininess that some pure shea butter products develop in cooler climates. The fatty acid profile is rich in stearic and oleic acids, with a notably high content of vitamin C, vitamin A, and vitamin E. In Indian Ayurvedic tradition, mango is associated with cooling, soothing properties — a categorisation that aligns with mango butter's documented use in folk skincare across South India and Southeast Asia for irritated and inflamed skin.

Almond Oil (Prunus amygdalus dulcis)

Sweet almond oil holds a particularly important place in Indian baby care tradition. The practice of "badaam ka tel ki maalish" — daily massage of an infant with sweet almond oil — has been a multi-generational tradition across Indian households for centuries, and the practice has survived because it works. Sweet almond oil is approximately 65 to 70% oleic acid and 20 to 25% linoleic acid, making it one of the closest natural mimics to the fatty acid composition of human sebum. It absorbs readily into the stratum corneum without leaving a heavy occlusive layer, contributes vitamin E and small amounts of zinc and magnesium, and is one of the most consistently well-tolerated oils in paediatric topical use. Its inclusion in the Deyga Baby Butter brings the formulation into direct continuity with traditional Indian infant care while delivering it in a more convenient and stable body-butter format than a loose oil bottle.

Chamomile Oil (Matricaria chamomilla)

Chamomile is the formulation's primary soothing and anti-inflammatory ingredient, and it brings this property into the body butter through documented active compounds. Chamomile flower oil contains alpha-bisabolol, chamazulene, and a range of flavonoids (apigenin, luteolin, quercetin) that have been studied for their gentle anti-inflammatory, anti-irritant, and skin-calming effects. Chamomile's use in infant skincare predates modern formulations by centuries — it has been used in European, Egyptian, and South Asian traditions for soothing irritated baby skin, calming pre-sleep restlessness, and providing gentle support for minor rashes. In the Deyga formulation, the small inclusion of chamomile oil shifts the body butter from being purely emollient (lipid-replenishing) to being mildly soothing as well, which is particularly valuable for babies prone to redness, mild rashes, or post-bath irritation.

Jojoba Oil (Simmondsia chinensis)

Jojoba is the chemical anomaly in the formulation, and its inclusion is what makes the Deyga Baby Butter genuinely thoughtful rather than just plant-oil-and-butter. Despite the name, jojoba is not technically an oil — it is a liquid wax ester, structurally distinct from the triglycerides that make up most plant oils. The unique property of jojoba is that its molecular structure is remarkably similar to human sebum, the natural lipid produced by human sebaceous glands. This means jojoba integrates into the skin's lipid layer essentially as if it were native sebum, which is exactly the property that benefits a population (infants) whose own sebum production has not yet started. Jojoba also has natural antimicrobial properties, is highly stable against oxidation (giving the product an inherently longer shelf life without synthetic preservatives), and is one of the most non-comedogenic and well-tolerated topical ingredients across all skin types and ages.

THE INGREDIENT-LIST DISCIPLINE IS THE WHOLE POINT: Compare the back-of-pack ingredient list of the Deyga Baby Butter (5 items) with the back-of-pack ingredient list of a typical mainstream drugstore baby lotion (often 25 to 35 items, including methylparaben, propylparaben, methylisothiazolinone, fragrance-blend disclosures, EDTA, polysorbates, polyethylene glycols, dimethicone, BHT, and synthetic colour additives). For adult skin, this difference is largely cosmetic. For infant skin — with its 30% thinner stratum corneum, three times higher relative surface-area-to-weight ratio, and immature barrier function — the difference is meaningful in both directions: more ingredients means more potential sensitisers crossing into circulation, while fewer ingredients means a simpler exposure profile and a much shorter list of suspects if a reaction does occur. The choice of a five-ingredient formulation is the most quietly valuable decision Deyga has made on this product.

Who Benefits Most from a Daily Routine with Deyga Baby Butter?

Newborns and Infants in Daily Massage Routines

The Indian tradition of daily infant massage — the practice that nearly every Indian baby experiences in their first year through grandmother-led ritual or maa-led routine — is one of the most deeply embedded baby care practices in South Asian culture. The practice is supported by genuine research: gentle infant massage has been documented to support sleep regulation, vagal tone, weight gain in low-birthweight infants, parent-baby bonding, and the natural settling response. The choice of what to massage with, however, is what determines whether the practice supports the skin or strains it. The Deyga Baby Butter — built around almond oil, the traditional Indian infant massage oil, in a richer body-butter base — is one of the more thoughtful modern updates to this tradition, providing the convenience of a tin-format product without sacrificing the ingredient simplicity that the traditional oil massage relied on.

Babies with Mild Eczema, Cradle Cap, or Atopic Tendencies

Atopic dermatitis (eczema) is one of the most common skin conditions in infancy, affecting an estimated 10 to 20% of children at some point in their first three years of life. The standard paediatric dermatology approach to mild infant eczema is consistent moisturisation with simple, fragrance-free emollients — a category in which the Deyga Baby Butter sits comfortably. The shea-and-mango butter base provides the lipid replenishment that compromised eczema-prone skin needs, the chamomile contributes mild anti-inflammatory support, and the absence of synthetic fragrance and preservatives reduces the trigger load that is particularly problematic for atopic skin. As always with eczema and cradle cap, persistent or worsening conditions should be discussed with the paediatrician, and the Baby Butter is best understood as a daily emollient layer alongside whatever specific medical treatment the paediatrician has recommended — not as a substitute for diagnosis or prescribed care.

Diaspora Babies in Dry Indoor Climates

Indian-origin babies born and growing up in continental US climates — Chicago, Boston, Toronto, Minneapolis, Seattle in the winter, Phoenix and Las Vegas year-round — face a specific environmental challenge: indoor heating and air conditioning produce relative humidity levels that can drop below 25%, well below the 40 to 60% range in which infant skin barrier function is most easily maintained. The result is the dry, tight, sometimes flaky baby skin that even healthy babies develop in these climates, particularly through the winter months. A richer body butter (rather than a thin lotion) provides better occlusive protection against transepidermal water loss in these dry-air environments, and the Deyga formulation is well-positioned for exactly this use case — heavy enough to seal in moisture, simple enough to apply daily without ingredient fatigue.

Parents Looking to Simplify the Baby Skincare Shelf

One of the underappreciated benefits of a five-ingredient baby butter is that it can replace several other products in the typical baby skincare shelf. As a daily moisturiser, it covers the function of a baby lotion. As a richer overnight balm, it covers the function of an intensive baby cream. Applied lightly to the scalp, it can support the management of dry-flaky cradle cap (with the standard caveat about discussing persistent cradle cap with the paediatrician). Applied to elbows, knees, and the post-bath body, it covers the function of any number of "specialty" baby moisturisers. For parents who are increasingly choosing to simplify the number of products in their baby's daily routine — both for skin reasons and for the practical reason that a smaller skincare shelf is easier to maintain consistently — the Deyga Baby Butter is the kind of single-product workhorse that makes that simplification possible.

Pregnant and Postpartum Women (Yes, Really)

This is the bonus use case that many parents discover: an unscented body butter built around shea, mango, almond, and jojoba is also one of the better post-pregnancy and breastfeeding-period body moisturisers a mother can keep at hand. The same fragrance-free, ingredient-simple profile that makes it appropriate for baby skin makes it appropriate for the mother's own skin during a period when she may be hyper-aware of what comes into contact with her baby (because babies put hands and faces against mother's skin constantly). Dry patches on the abdomen post-delivery, dry hands from frequent hand-washing during feeding, and dry forearms from where the baby rests — all of these benefit from the same gentle butter that the baby is using, with the added convenience that the mother does not need a separate fragranced product that might transfer to the baby.

Bring the gentlest, simplest, most thoughtfully-formulated baby butter into your daily ritual today. Get the Deyga Baby Butter here — 40g handcrafted tin for $15.54 (regular price $21.14, save 26%) on Swadesiicart, free shipping on orders above $55, 14-day hassle-free returns, and SSL-secured checkout.

Application Protocol: How to Get the Most from the Deyga Baby Butter

The way a body butter is applied to an infant matters as much as which butter is chosen. The following protocol reflects best practices from paediatric dermatology and traditional Indian infant care:

       Patch-test before first full use: Apply a small amount to the inside of the baby's forearm or behind the ear and observe for 24 to 48 hours for any redness, irritation, or unusual reaction before applying the product to broader skin areas. This is the single most important step before introducing any new product to baby skin.

       Apply to slightly damp skin after bath: The standard paediatric dermatology recommendation for infant moisturising is to apply a moisturiser within 3 minutes of patting the baby's skin dry after a bath, while the skin is still slightly damp. This "soak and seal" technique traps the surface moisture under the lipid layer of the body butter and dramatically improves hydration retention.

       Warm a small amount between your palms first: The body butter is solid-to-semi-solid at cool temperatures and softens with the warmth of your hands. Take a pea-sized amount on a fingertip from the tin, place it between your palms, and rub gently for 10 to 15 seconds until it softens into a smooth, easy-to-spread cream.

       Use slow, gentle, rhythmic strokes: Indian traditional infant massage uses long, slow strokes from the centre of the body outward — chest to arms, abdomen to legs, back to limbs — with a relaxed pace and gentle pressure. The combination of the butter and the rhythmic touch is what produces the documented sleep-and-bonding benefits of the practice.

       Avoid the eye area, mouth, and broken skin: Body butter is not intended for application around the eyes, on the lips, or on any broken or weeping skin. For specific concerns in these areas, consult a paediatrician for area-appropriate products.

       Apply once or twice daily depending on dryness: Most babies benefit from a single daily application after the evening bath. Babies with very dry skin or who live in particularly dry indoor climates may benefit from a second light application in the morning. As the baby's barrier function matures over the first year, dryness typically decreases and frequency can be adjusted accordingly.

       Keep the tin closed and stored in a cool, dry place: Body butter is best stored at room temperature, away from direct sunlight and heat sources. The lack of synthetic preservatives means the natural shelf life of the product depends on cleanliness of handling — always take product from the tin with a clean, dry fingertip or a small clean spoon, and close the tin immediately after use to maintain freshness.

       Watch for any sign of skin reaction: Even with the gentlest natural ingredients, individual sensitivities can occur. If you notice any redness, rash, persistent itching, swelling, or any reaction that concerns you, discontinue use and consult your paediatrician promptly.

Deyga Baby Butter in Context: How It Compares with Common Alternatives

How does this product position relative to other categories typically considered for daily baby moisturisation? Each category brings different trade-offs in ingredient simplicity, format convenience, and traditional alignment.

Factor

Deyga Baby Butter

Mainstream Drugstore Lotion

Plain Almond/Coconut Oil

Petroleum Jelly

Ingredient count

5 (handcrafted)

25–35 (industrial)

1 (single oil)

1 (petrolatum)

Synthetic fragrance

None — unscented

Often present

None

None

Synthetic preservatives

None

Multiple typically

None

None

Format convenience

Tin, easy to apply

Pump bottle, very easy

Bottle, can be messy

Tub or tube, slightly waxy

Lipid replenishment

Excellent — multi-source

Variable (often water-based)

Good — single fatty acid profile

Occlusive only, no lipid replacement

Soothing actives

Chamomile included

Variable — often added in

None

None

Indian tradition alignment

Strong (almond oil base)

Weak — Western format

Strong — original tradition

Modern Western

Cradle cap & dry patches

Helpful gentle support

Variable

Helpful

Heavy occlusion only

Suitability for daily use on newborns

Yes (with patch test)

Variable — fragrance concern

Yes (well-tolerated)

Yes — but only barrier

Price per use

Moderate ($15.54 / 40g)

Low–moderate

Very low

Very low

 

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Frequently Asked Questions About Deyga Baby Butter

Q1. Is the Deyga Baby Butter safe to use on newborns from day one?

Most paediatric dermatology recommendations support the use of simple, fragrance-free emollients on newborn skin from the first weeks of life, particularly after the umbilical cord stump has healed (typically 1 to 3 weeks after birth). The Deyga Baby Butter's ingredient profile — five natural ingredients, no fragrance, no synthetic preservatives — is well-aligned with this guidance. However, every baby is different, and the standard recommendation before introducing any new product is to (a) discuss with your paediatrician, particularly for very young newborns or those with any specific skin or health considerations, and (b) perform a patch test on a small area of the baby's skin (the inside of the forearm or behind the ear) and observe for 24 to 48 hours before broader application.

Q2. The product contains almond oil. Is it safe for babies with potential nut allergies?

Sweet almond oil applied topically is generally considered low-risk for triggering tree-nut allergy in infants — the proteins responsible for nut allergy are largely removed during oil extraction, and topical exposure is much less likely to provoke a reaction than ingestion. That said, families with a strong history of severe tree-nut allergy or peanut allergy in immediate family members should specifically discuss any almond-containing topical product with their paediatrician before use. A patch test on a small area before broader application is essential, and any sign of redness, rash, or hives should prompt immediate discontinuation and medical consultation. For families who prefer to avoid any almond exposure, a coconut-oil-based or olive-oil-based alternative would be a more appropriate choice.

Q3. Is the Deyga Baby Butter suitable for babies with eczema?

The standard paediatric dermatology approach to mild infant eczema includes consistent daily moisturisation with simple, fragrance-free emollients — a category that the Deyga Baby Butter fits well. The shea-and-mango butter base provides good lipid replenishment, the chamomile contributes mild anti-inflammatory support, and the absence of fragrance and synthetic preservatives reduces the trigger profile that is particularly important for atopic skin. However, eczema is a medical condition that varies significantly between babies, and some atopic babies are sensitive to specific natural ingredients (including chamomile, see Q4 below). The right approach for an eczema baby is to (a) discuss with the paediatrician or paediatric dermatologist, (b) patch-test the product before broader use, (c) observe carefully for any reaction, and (d) treat the body butter as a daily emollient layer alongside any specific medical treatment the doctor has prescribed, never as a substitute for medical care.

Q4. The product contains chamomile oil. Are there any concerns about chamomile sensitivity?

Yes — this is worth being aware of. A small percentage of individuals are sensitive to chamomile, particularly those with pre-existing allergies to plants in the Asteraceae family (which includes ragweed, daisies, marigolds, chrysanthemums, and asters). Babies with a known family history of seasonal allergies, hay fever, or sensitivity to these plant families have a marginally higher likelihood of chamomile sensitivity. The patch test before first broader use is particularly important for this reason. Most babies tolerate chamomile well, and chamomile has a centuries-long history of use in infant skincare, but individual sensitivities do occur, and any sign of redness or irritation after patch testing should result in discontinuation.

Q5. How long does the 40g tin last with daily use?

The 40-gram tin contains enough product for approximately 6 to 10 weeks of daily use, depending on application generosity. For full-body daily massage of a younger infant (where you typically use a slightly smaller amount per application), the tin tends to last toward the longer end of that range. For a toddler with full-body application after every bath, the tin tends to last toward the shorter end. The natural absence of synthetic preservatives means the product is best used within 6 to 12 months of opening, which aligns comfortably with the typical use timeline. Always close the tin tightly between uses and avoid contaminating the product with wet fingers.

Q6. Can I use this product on my own skin as an adult?

Absolutely — the same gentle, fragrance-free ingredient profile that makes it appropriate for baby skin makes it an excellent option for adult sensitive-skin profiles, eczema-prone adults, and post-pregnancy mothers who want a moisturiser that does not interfere with the products they are using on their baby. Many parents discover this use case quickly: a single tin can serve both the baby and the mother, particularly during the first months postpartum when minimising fragrance transfer between mother and baby is a common priority.

Q7. The price is higher than mainstream baby lotion. Is it worth it?

This depends on what you are comparing on. By volume, the Deyga Baby Butter is more expensive per gram than a 24-ounce bottle of mainstream baby lotion. By ingredient cost — what it actually costs to source organic, cold-pressed, unrefined shea butter, mango butter, sweet almond oil, chamomile oil, and jojoba oil at the quality grades used in this product — handcrafted natural baby products are price-competitive with their ingredient sourcing, and significantly cheaper than higher-end natural baby brands from Western markets that use comparable ingredient lists. The price reflects what the product actually contains rather than reflecting volume that has been bulked out with water and synthetic emulsifiers. For families who have decided that ingredient simplicity matters for their baby's skincare, the Deyga product is one of the better value-for-quality options in the Indian natural-skincare category.

Q8. Is Deyga a trusted brand, and where is the product made?

Deyga (formally Deyga Organics) is an Indian natural skincare brand founded by entrepreneur Arthi Raguram in Tamil Nadu, India. The brand has built a strong reputation in the Indian natural-skincare community for its handcrafted, small-batch formulations, ingredient transparency, and discipline around fragrance-free and chemical-free positioning. Products are manufactured in Tamil Nadu and have appeared on Indian platforms including Shark Tank India, where the brand received attention for its founder-led, ingredient-honest positioning. The Baby Butter on Swadesiicart is the genuine Deyga product imported from India, with Swadesiicart's standard authenticity guarantee and 14-day return policy.

The Five-Ingredient Decision That Matters More Than Most Parents Realise

Most decisions about a baby's daily routine are larger and more visible than the choice of moisturiser. The cot, the car seat, the formula, the schedule, the paediatrician — these are the visible decisions, the ones that families discuss and research and choose carefully. The choice of which body butter sits on the changing-table shelf is rarely made with the same intentionality, and yet over the first three years of a baby's life, this small product will probably make more sustained physical contact with the child's skin than any other single object — applied daily, sometimes twice daily, across the most permeable barrier in the human body, accumulating exposure across the most rapid period of physical and developmental growth in the entire human lifespan. The decision deserves more attention than it usually gets.

The Deyga Baby Butter is what happens when a small Indian skincare brand makes that decision well on the parent's behalf. Five ingredients. No synthetic fragrance. No parabens. No phthalates. No PEGs. No mineral oil. No synthetic preservatives. Organic shea butter for the lipid foundation. Mango butter for the texture and the South Indian heritage of mango-derived skincare. Sweet almond oil for the unbroken thread to multi-generational Indian infant massage tradition. Chamomile for the gentle anti-inflammatory layer. Jojoba for the sebum-mimicking integration that infant skin needs precisely because its own sebum production has not yet started. A 40-gram tin of handcrafted body butter that does one thing exceptionally well — nourishes the most delicate skin in the household without asking that skin to deal with anything else — at a price that is honest about what is in the bottle. The kind of small, careful, well-considered product that quietly makes the daily ritual of baby care a little simpler, a little kinder, and a little closer to the traditional inheritance that Indian families have carried forward across generations.

Bring the gentlest, simplest, most thoughtfully-handcrafted baby butter into your daily ritual today. Shop the Deyga Baby Butter on Swadesiicart now — 40g handcrafted tin for $15.54 (regular price $21.14, save 26%), free shipping on orders above $55, SSL-secured checkout, 14-day hassle-free returns, and authentic Deyga quality delivered to your door across the United States.

40g Handcrafted Tin   |   $15.54 USD (Regular $21.14, Save 26%)   |   Five-Ingredient Formulation   |   Organic Shea Butter + Mango Butter + Almond Oil + Chamomile Oil + Jojoba Oil   |   Unscented   |   No Parabens, Phthalates, PEGs, Mineral Oil, or Synthetic Fragrance   |   Suitable for Newborn and Up (with Patch Test)   |   Deyga Organics, India

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