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Black Cumin

North Africa / Middle East · Egypt

Black Cumin

Nigella sativa seed oil

Antioxidant scalp support, barrier conditioning, a calm and balanced scalp
Black Cumin — close up

How It Works

The mechanism.

Black cumin (Nigella sativa) oil is rich in thymoquinone and skin-friendly fatty acids. Thymoquinone is a well-studied antioxidant that helps protect the scalp from the everyday oxidative stress of heat, sun and pollution, while the oil's linoleic acid reinforces the scalp's natural lipid barrier - supporting the calm, comfortable, well-moisturised scalp environment in which hair looks and feels its healthiest.

Origins & Tradition

Where it comes from.

Called 'Habbatus sauda' in Arabic and referenced in Islamic hadith as 'a cure for everything except death,' black cumin has been used in North African and Middle Eastern hair and scalp care for over 2,000 years. In Ethiopian and Somali tradition, Nigella sativa seeds are ground and mixed with shea butter for postpartum hair restoration — recognising the DHT surge after childbirth that causes telogen effluvium (stress shedding). This traditional knowledge predated the scientific identification of thymoquinone by millennia.

Active Compounds

The chemistry.

thymoquinone
thymohydroquinone
linoleic acid
oleic acid
tocopherols
phytosterols
Oil droplets on the hair shaft — magnified
The hair shaft · magnified

The Research

What the science says.

Black cumin oil has been studied for its antioxidant and skin-conditioning properties and carries a documented place in North African and Middle Eastern hair care stretching back more than two thousand years. Where tradition placed it on the scalp for fullness and comfort, modern cosmetic research points to thymoquinone's antioxidant activity as part of the reason.