How to use our foam cream bottle correctly

Illustration of an aerosol spray can showing sections for gaseous and liquid propellant, and emulsion, with labels.

1. The bottle - before use

Before use, the contents of the bottle are in three different parts: the emulsion is at the bottom, above this is the liquid part of the propellant, and the gaseous part is at the top.

Hand holding and shaking a spray can with colored dots inside, illustrating mixing of propellant and emulsion.

2. Shake first...

When you shake the bottle, the liquid part of the propellant mixes with the emulsion.

Hand squeezing gel from a spray bottle, showing internal structure with colored sections and a checkmark icon.

3. ...Then hold upright!

When you press the spray head, the gaseous part of the propellant pushes the mixture through the ascending tube and out of the bottle. Once it leaves the bottle, the propellant in the emulsion abruptly expands and becomes gaseous, creating the foam cream.

Illustration showing a hand pouring spice from a bottle into an open palm, with a symbol indicating incorrect usage.

Incorrect use

If the bottle is held with the spray head pointing downwards, the open end of the ascending tube protrudes upwards into the gaseous part of the propellant. This only allows propellant to escape when the valve opens.