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Clean Cotton Laundry Linen White Black Monochromatic Bar Soap | Scent: Fresh Cotton

$9.50
Clean Cotton Laundry Linen White Black Monochromatic Bar Soap | Scent: Fresh Cotton

~~MARBLED GRANITE~~

Marbled Granite is a crisp and modern soap that captures the clean comfort of cotton and freshly folded laundry. Its striking black and white design adds a bold, elegant touch to your sink or shower. The creamy lather leaves your skin feeling soft and refreshed, while the airy scent wraps you in the timeless essence of freshly washed linens. Simple, sleek, and oh-so-clean.

Fragrance: Freshly laundered cotton and linen

My soap ingredients may include: water, saponified oils of shea butter, cocoa butter, coconut oil, castor oil, olive oil, sustainably sourced palm oil, avocado oil, sweet almond oil, kaolin clay, phthalate-free fragrance oil, mica powders, activated charcoal, and titanium dioxide.

HANDCRAFTED VARIANCE:
By the nature of handmade goods in small batches, each bar may vary slightly in a batch. But I think that's the fun part of cutting a batch and seeing the surprise! Each bar is approximately 4.5oz (127g) but please allow for some human handcut variance.

We make soap locally in Richmond, VA. To reduce shipping costs, we encourage you to pick up orders directly from us.

All my soaps are cured for 6 weeks before going live in my shop, but here are some tips to maximize your soap’s life.

SOAP CARE TIPS:
+Allow soap to dry between uses
+Avoid leaving soap in direct streams of water
+Use a soap dish that drains water, not collects it
+Utilize a soap saver to get every last bit of that umpscious bar

SODIUM HYDROXIDE?
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH), or lye, is a key-component of soap-making, which is a chemical process at its core. Though it is caustic in its raw form, the sodium hydroxide reacts with the fatty acids in the oils in order to form soap in a process called saponification. After the emulsion cools down and hardens, viola! We have soap. There are no harmful traces of Sodium hydroxide in the soap product because all the atoms ionize and form sodium salts with the base oils and water. Still unsure? If it helps, I had my chemistry professor break it down for me, and no, I didn’t get extra credit.

YAASS, SAVING THE PLANET FROM YET ANOTHER PLASTIC BOTTLE.