A fresh recall scan is a practical habit for Canadian shoppers because many notices do not look dramatic at first glance. This week’s list is a good example: one recall is about missing chemical-labelling information on grooming products, one is about cannabis packaging that does not match what is inside, and one is about unclear instructions for a popular-style beauty device. None of these notices should trigger panic, but all three are worth checking before the products are used, stored in a bathroom cabinet, left near children or passed along to someone else. The simple takeaway is to treat recall checks like a receipt check: look at the brand, model or lot number, compare it with the official notice, and follow the posted instructions rather than guessing.
Health Canada’s June 3 notice says Oster Kool-Lube and Oster Blade Wash have been recalled because the products do not meet labelling requirements under the Consumer Chemicals and Containers Regulations, 2001. These are blue pressurized containers with black lids used around grooming clippers, so the affected items may be in homes with pets, barbershops, salons, grooming kits or small business storage rooms. Health Canada says the lack of appropriate labelling information could lead to unintentional exposure and serious illness or injury. The affected Oster Kool-Lube item numbers listed in the notice include 76300101005 and 76300101200, and the Oster Blade Wash item listed is 76300104104. The agency says that, as of May 28, 2026, the company had received no reports of incidents or injuries in Canada.
If you have the Oster products, the official advice is straightforward: stop using them immediately, keep them out of reach of children, and dispose of them according to municipal hazardous-waste guidelines. That last point matters because pressurized chemical products are not the same as an empty shampoo bottle or a regular recycling item. For households, the useful move is to check the garage, laundry room, bathroom cupboard and any pet-care tote where sprays and blade cleaners might sit for months. For small businesses, put the recalled cans aside where staff cannot accidentally use them, then check the recall page or the company’s recall information before replacing stock. Also remember that recalled products cannot be redistributed, sold or even given away in Canada, so a “free curbside pickup” box is not a safe solution.
A second notice, posted June 2, covers Hybrid Infusions Ltd.’s Champagne Supernova 3x0.5g Pre-Roll sold through authorized retailers in Alberta. The issue is packaging and labelling: Health Canada says the affected product is packaged in the wrong tube, with one 1-gram pre-roll inside instead of three 0.5-gram pre-rolls. The affected lot is CS0002, product size 3 x 0.5g, with packaging date 2026 MA 01. The notice says 864 units of the recalled product were sold from May 13 to May 26, 2026, and that the company had received two complaints and no adverse reaction reports about the recalled lot at the time of the notice. For shoppers, the key point is that cannabis packaging is part of the product information: amount, serving expectations and labelling details can affect how people store and use it. If the lot matches, Health Canada says to contact the store where the product was bought if you wish to return it, and to report health or safety complaints through the Cannabis Reporting Form.
The third item is the Kala Red Light Face Mask, a health-product recall notice that appeared in the current recall feed and points to a user-manual problem. The affected product is the Kala Red Light Face Mask, lot or serial number 8191KY, model KALA-01. Health Canada says the user manual is not clear enough and that users should not store or use the device in high temperature or subject it to physical damage from an external impact or a high fall. This is a good reminder for the growing category of at-home beauty and wellness gadgets: the risk is not always a broken part at the cash register. Sometimes the concern is that instructions do not clearly explain storage, heat, handling or damage limits. If you own this model, compare the lot and model details with the recall page and follow the manufacturer or Health Canada instructions before the next use.
A good recall routine takes less than ten minutes. Search your home by product category, not just by brand: grooming sprays with pet tools, cannabis in a locked storage area, beauty devices with chargers and manuals, and older purchases in bathroom drawers. Match the exact product name, lot, UPC, model or item number before assuming your item is affected. If a notice says to stop using a product, do that first and sort out refunds or disposal second. Keep receipts when you have them, but do not assume you are stuck without one; many recall processes rely on product identification rather than a perfect paper trail. Finally, avoid buying “too-good-to-be-true” recalled items in resale groups. The Canada Consumer Product Safety Act warning on recall pages is there for a reason: recalled consumer products should not be resold or given away.
Source trail: - Health Canada: “Oster Kool-Lube and Oster Blade Wash recalled due to improper labelling” — https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/oster-kool-lube-and-oster-blade-wash-recalled-due-improper-labelling - Health Canada: “Hybrid Infusions Ltd. recalls Champagne Supernova 3x0.5g Pre-Roll due to packaging and labelling issue” — https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/hybrid-infusions-ltd-recalls-champagne-supernova-3x05g-pre-roll-due-packaging-and - Health Canada: “Kala Red Light Face Mask” — https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/kala-red-light-face-mask