Are all soaps
the same? No. There are many different
soaps out there.
So how do you know what you’re getting? Read the
ingredients. Know what you’re putting on your skin.
There are a
few different ways to make homemade bar soaps. There’s Cold Process, Hot
Process and Melt & Pour. We use the Cold Process method. To make cold process or hot process bars of
soap you need Sodium Hydroxide. Without it you cannot make bar soap. Then there’s
melt & pour, which is typically in a block form you can buy at craft stores
or online. You melt and pour in your own molds and add your own scents and
herbs.
Then there’s
the question of ingredients. We feel ingredients are very important! Which is
why we use Non-GMO oils and feed our goats Non-GMO grains so the milk in our
products are produced from goats whose diet is carefully monitored.
Here’s a list
of our ingredients: Goats milk, olive
oil, coconut oil, babassu oil, safflower oil, castor oil, organic flax oil, *sodium
hydroxide, organic cane sugar and some soaps may contain the following ,
essential oil, fragrance oil, rose petals, lavender flowers, rosemary,
spearmint, oatmeal, mango butter, cocoa butter, shea butter, aloe juice, honey,
eggshells. *Sodium hydroxide is not in the finished product. We cure our soaps
at least six weeks which cures the sodium hydroxide (lye) out of the soap. We
source Non-GMO oils for all our products.
The average
cold process and hot process soaps contain: Water, a variety of vegetable oils,
and can contain a variety of butters, herbs, essential oil and/or fragrance oil
and sodium hydroxide.
The average
ingredients list from melt & pour: Propylene Glycol, Sorbitol, Water, Sodium Stearate, Sodium Laureth
Sulfate, Sodium Laurate, Glycerin, Goat Milk, Triethanolamine, Titanium Dioxide.
The typical ingredients in commercial soaps: Sodium cocoyl isethionate, stearic
acid, coconut acid, sodium tallowate (animal fat), water, sodium isethionate,
sodium stearate, cocamidopropyl bentaine, sodium cocoate and/or sodium palm
kernelate, fragrance, sodium chloride, tetrasodium EDTA, trisodium etidronate,
BHT, titanium dioxide, sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate
There are a
lot of great soaps out there and some that don’t meet our standards or other
soap maker standards. You just have to decide what’s right for you. If you want
to stay away from Non-GMO ingredients be sure what vegetable oils are being
used in your soap. Some people use tallow in their soaps. We’re not knocking
the use of tallow that’s what the pioneers used for fats in their soap. One
thing I would caution is where did the fat come from? Was it from animals fed a
diet on Non-GMO grains? When it comes to commercial soap many use tallow and given
the cheap price I would worry that the tallow came from overcrowded feed lots
not fed exactly healthy. Don’t be fooled with the commercial soaps that say now
20% larger. Often they fill their soap with air to make a bigger bar. It doesn’t
make the bar last longer.
We hope when
you’re out there shopping for soaps we’ve helped inspire you to read the
ingredients and know what you’re putting on your skin.
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