Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C

2014-08-09 Thread André Juthe
How much silver ions did you drink meanwhile you were putting the vit C on
your face?


2014-08-09 23:54 GMT+02:00 sol :

> mgperrault wrote:
>
>>   I wonder if there are interactions with CS and AA and DHAA...
>>
> I think there may well be. Vit C/ascorbic acid can cause a photoreactivity
> type reaction with silver. I forget what this is called.
> About 3 years ago, I began using homemade vit C serum on my face, and
> continued to do my almost daily misting of face/eyes when out in public. I
> managed to give myself argryia of the face, particularly under eyes and
> under around my chin area, you know, where the wrinkles are that I was
> trying to get rid of. It wasn't so bad strangers were staring at me or
> anything, but my husband and son really noticed it.
> sol
>
>
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Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C

2014-08-09 Thread sol

mgperrault wrote:

  I wonder if there are interactions with CS and AA and DHAA...
I think there may well be. Vit C/ascorbic acid can cause a 
photoreactivity type reaction with silver. I forget what this is called.
About 3 years ago, I began using homemade vit C serum on my face, and 
continued to do my almost daily misting of face/eyes when out in public. 
I managed to give myself argryia of the face, particularly under eyes 
and under around my chin area, you know, where the wrinkles are that I 
was trying to get rid of. It wasn't so bad strangers were staring at me 
or anything, but my husband and son really noticed it.

sol

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Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C

2014-08-09 Thread mgperrault

Doug Kitt,

Well done!  Thank you for sharing your work.  Excellent information.   
Best of luck with your venture.  I am sure there is a lot of interesting 
information regarding the biochemistry of dehydroascorbic vit c.Any 
info you are inclined to share is most welcome.   I seem to recall that 
the body uses both DHAA and AA a little differently  and can convert 
them.   I wonder if there are interactions with CS and AA and DHAA...


thanks again...



mgp



On 8/8/2014 4:46 PM, Doug wrote:


Dehydroascorbic acid (DHAA) is a form of vitamin C that is absorbed 
much better than common ascorbic acid (AA). When taken orally, 5 grams 
of DHAA results in peak blood plasma vitamin C levels twice as high as 
AA or liposomal C. DHAA for dietary use can be made by an economical, 
do-it-yourself method right at home. I have published a YouTube video 
that teaches you how to make it. This is a very long video (45 
minutes) that discusses the science behind why DHAA is absorbed so 
much better, shows actual blood absorption data comparing various oral 
forms of vitamin C, and demonstrates in great detail the DIY method 
for making DHAA. People who are interested in achieving high blood 
levels of vitamin C will be very interested. I am going to post a link 
to this video here, but before I do, please be informed of the 
following disclosure and notice:


My name is Doug Kitt, and I am a commercial vendor of vitamin C 
products. I have a commercial interest in the video. The name of my 
company is mentioned several times, and one of my products is briefly 
discussed. You will be asked for a donation at the end of the video. 
Furthermore, data is presented that some people consider critical of 
liposomal C. If any of these things is likely to offend you, please 
don't click on the link!


http://youtu.be/YHKBhz7OCB4





Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C

2014-08-09 Thread Dee
There are issues with taking too much vit C I believe.  It is necessary for 
many things but only in moderate amountsdee

Sent from my iPad

> On 9 Aug 2014, at 14:46, PT Ferrance  wrote:
> 
> Thanks.  The thing is that it is not always available in the state you 
> recommend... think winter.
> Interesting for those of us who have issues taking Vit C supplementation.
> PT
>  
> Rev. PT Ferrance, L.Ac.
> From: Doug 
> To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
> Sent: Friday, August 8, 2014 11:25 PM
> Subject: RE: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C
> 
> Hi PT,
> Many vegetables and other plants contain ascorbic acid oxidase. But zucchini 
> squash contains a much higher concentration than any other known source. It’s 
> important to use as high concentration of AAO as possible in order to produce 
> as much DHAA as possible.
> Doug
>  
> 
> 
> From: PT Ferrance [mailto:ptf2...@bellsouth.net] 
> Sent: Friday, August 08, 2014 6:46 PM
> To: silver-list@eskimo.com
> Subject: Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C
>  
> Interesting video.  Do you ever use vegetables other than zucchini?  Could 
> you use parsley?
> PT
>  
> From: Doug 
> To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
> Sent: Friday, August 8, 2014 7:46 PM
> Subject: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C
>  
> Dehydroascorbic acid (DHAA) is a form of vitamin C that is absorbed much 
> better than common ascorbic acid (AA). When taken orally, 5 grams of DHAA 
> results in peak blood plasma vitamin C levels twice as high as AA or 
> liposomal C. DHAA for dietary use can be made by an economical, 
> do-it-yourself method right at home. I have published a YouTube video that 
> teaches you how to make it. This is a very long video (45 minutes) that 
> discusses the science behind why DHAA is absorbed so much better, shows 
> actual blood absorption data comparing various oral forms of vitamin C, and 
> demonstrates in great detail the DIY method for making DHAA. People who are 
> interested in achieving high blood levels of vitamin C will be very 
> interested. I am going to post a link to this video here, but before I do, 
> please be informed of the following disclosure and notice:
> My name is Doug Kitt, and I am a commercial vendor of vitamin C products. I 
> have a commercial interest in the video. The name of my company is mentioned 
> several times, and one of my products is briefly discussed. You will be asked 
> for a donation at the end of the video. Furthermore, data is presented that 
> some people consider critical of liposomal C. If any of these things is 
> likely to offend you, please don’t click on the link!
> http://youtu.be/YHKBhz7OCB4
>  
>  
> 
> 


Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C

2014-08-09 Thread PT Ferrance
Not everything can be cured with vit C.
PT

 


 From: sol 
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Saturday, August 9, 2014 11:24 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C
 

He doesn't look very healthy to me. And his fingernails look awful.
sol




Doug wrote:
>
> Dehydroascorbic acid (DHAA) is a form of vitamin C that is absorbed 
> much better than common ascorbic acid (AA). When taken orally, 5 grams 
> of DHAA results in peak blood plasma vitamin C levels twice as high as 
> AA or liposomal C. DHAA for dietary use can be made by an economical, 
> do-it-yourself method right at home. I have published a YouTube video 
> that teaches you how to make it. This is a very long video (45 
> minutes) that discusses the science behind why DHAA is absorbed so 
> much better, shows actual blood absorption data comparing various oral 
> forms of vitamin C, and demonstrates in great detail the DIY method 
> for making DHAA. People who are interested in achieving high blood 
> levels of vitamin C will be very interested. I am going to post a link 
> to this video here, but before I do, please be informed of the 
> following disclosure and notice:
>
> My name is Doug Kitt, and I am a commercial vendor of vitamin C 
> products. I have a commercial interest in the video. The name of my 
> company is mentioned several times, and one of my products is briefly 
> discussed. You will be asked for a donation at the end of the video. 
> Furthermore, data is presented that some people consider critical of 
> liposomal C. If any of these things is likely to offend you, please 
> don’t click on the link!
>
> http://youtu.be/YHKBhz7OCB4
>


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Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C

2014-08-09 Thread sol

He doesn't look very healthy to me. And his fingernails look awful.
sol

Doug wrote:


Dehydroascorbic acid (DHAA) is a form of vitamin C that is absorbed 
much better than common ascorbic acid (AA). When taken orally, 5 grams 
of DHAA results in peak blood plasma vitamin C levels twice as high as 
AA or liposomal C. DHAA for dietary use can be made by an economical, 
do-it-yourself method right at home. I have published a YouTube video 
that teaches you how to make it. This is a very long video (45 
minutes) that discusses the science behind why DHAA is absorbed so 
much better, shows actual blood absorption data comparing various oral 
forms of vitamin C, and demonstrates in great detail the DIY method 
for making DHAA. People who are interested in achieving high blood 
levels of vitamin C will be very interested. I am going to post a link 
to this video here, but before I do, please be informed of the 
following disclosure and notice:


My name is Doug Kitt, and I am a commercial vendor of vitamin C 
products. I have a commercial interest in the video. The name of my 
company is mentioned several times, and one of my products is briefly 
discussed. You will be asked for a donation at the end of the video. 
Furthermore, data is presented that some people consider critical of 
liposomal C. If any of these things is likely to offend you, please 
don’t click on the link!


http://youtu.be/YHKBhz7OCB4




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Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C

2014-08-09 Thread PT Ferrance
Thanks.  The thing is that it is not always available in the state you 
recommend... think winter.
Interesting for those of us who have issues taking Vit C supplementation.
PT

 
Rev. PT Ferrance, L.Ac.



 From: Doug 
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Friday, August 8, 2014 11:25 PM
Subject: RE: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C
 


Hi PT,
Many vegetables and other plants contain ascorbic acid oxidase. But zucchini 
squash contains a much higher concentration than any other known source. It’s 
important to use as high concentration of AAO as possible in order to produce 
as much DHAA as possible.
Doug
 


From:PT Ferrance [mailto:ptf2...@bellsouth.net] 
Sent: Friday, August 08, 2014 6:46 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C
 
Interesting video.  Do you ever use vegetables other than zucchini?  Could you 
use parsley?
PT
 



From:Doug 
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Friday, August 8, 2014 7:46 PM
Subject: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C
 
Dehydroascorbic acid (DHAA) is a form of vitamin C that is absorbed much better 
than common ascorbic acid (AA). When taken orally, 5 grams of DHAA results in 
peak blood plasma vitamin C levels twice as high as AA or liposomal C. DHAA for 
dietary use can be made by an economical, do-it-yourself method right at home. 
I have published a YouTube video that teaches you how to make it. This is a 
very long video (45 minutes) that discusses the science behind why DHAA is 
absorbed so much better, shows actual blood absorption data comparing various 
oral forms of vitamin C, and demonstrates in great detail the DIY method for 
making DHAA. People who are interested in achieving high blood levels of 
vitamin C will be very interested. I am going to post a link to this video 
here, but before I do, please be informed of the following disclosure and 
notice:
My name is Doug Kitt, and I am a commercial vendor of vitamin C products. I 
have a commercial interest in the video. The name of my company is mentioned 
several times, and one of my products is briefly discussed. You will be asked 
for a donation at the end of the video. Furthermore, data is presented that 
some people consider critical of liposomal C. If any of these things is likely 
to offend you, please don’t click on the link!
http://youtu.be/YHKBhz7OCB4