Cashmere Bouquet Talc
Product Description
Cashmere Bouquet Talc was Colgate-Palmolive’s flagship cosmetic body powder, sold nationally from the early 20th century through the late 1980s. The product was widely used by adult women as a body powder, deodorant, and after-bath product.
The Cashmere Bouquet talc supply was sourced from mines in Vermont, Italy, and other locations during the asbestos era. Publicly filed asbestos litigation has produced verdicts and settlements documenting that the talc used in Cashmere Bouquet was contaminated with asbestos fiber, exposing consumers and beauty-industry workers to asbestos through normal product use.
Asbestos Contamination
Talc and asbestos are mineralogically adjacent — both are hydrated magnesium silicates that often occur in the same geological deposits. Talc mines worldwide have produced talc that is contaminated with asbestos fiber in varying concentrations depending on the specific deposit. Tremolite, anthophyllite, and actinolite asbestos forms are most commonly found as contaminants in talc; chrysotile appears less frequently.
Publicly filed asbestos litigation has documented that the talc supplied to Cashmere Bouquet Talc’s production line during the asbestos era contained asbestos fiber as a geological contaminant. The contamination was not always disclosed to downstream users — testing methodologies through the 1970s and 1980s often used techniques that did not reliably detect asbestos fiber in talc samples, leading to disputes about historical knowledge of contamination.
How Workers Were Exposed
Litigation records document the exposure pathway for workers who handled Cashmere Bouquet Talc:
Industrial workers: Workers at facilities that received bulk industrial talc — for use as filler, extender, processing aid, or release agent — handled the material in bulk quantities daily. Exposure occurred during bag handling, weighing, blending, transferring, and any operation that aerosolized the talc.
Manufacturing workers: Workers at the Cashmere Bouquet Talc production facilities handled the material during raw material receipt, formulation, blending, packaging, and quality control. The asbestos-contaminated talc was a primary ingredient in their daily work.
Consumers and beauticians (cosmetic talc): End users of cosmetic talc products experienced repeated low-dose exposure during normal product use over years or decades.
Bystander exposure: Workers in adjacent operations or living with workers in the talc supply chain experienced secondary exposure via dust transport on clothing, hair, and skin.
See also
- Industrial workers exposed to talc-asbestos
- Phenolic Resin & Plastic Molding Asbestos Archive — for cross-product exposure (GE phenolic compound contained J&J talc per the 2024 CT verdict)
- Free case evaluation
References reflect what has been alleged or documented in publicly filed asbestos litigation. This information does not constitute a finding of fact or liability.