Archive for ‘Uncategorized’

December 26th, 2011

Happy Twelve Days of Christmas!

Ask almost anyone about the Twelve Days of Christmas, and they’ll likely make reference to the familiar Christmas carol of the same name. But, what exactly are the twelve days of Christmas? Many people believe they are the twelve days leading up to Christmas day, but in fact, they are the 12 days following Christmas.  What fun to let our festivities extend a full 12 days beyond the holiday!

The Twelve Days of Christmas are collectively known as “Christmastide,” and are celebrated from Christmas day until the evening of January 5th, or “Twelfth Night.” The following morning, January 6th is the Feast of the Epiphany, and commemorates the day that the Magi arrived from the east, bringing gifts of frankincense, myrrh and gold to the newborn Christ child. The Epiphany (Greek for “manifestation”), celebrates the incarnation of God in Jesus, and his manifestation to the gentiles, two central dogmas of Christianity. Thus, the Twelve Days between Christmas and Epiphany are an obvious time of joy, merriment and continued celebration.

In light of all of this, I feel perfectly justified in keeping my Christmas lights and decorations up for a few more weeks. I have no nagging urge to drag our Christmas tree out or to dismantle the decorations that adorn every inch of our home. I’m quite content to continue my celebration of the Christmas season.

And, even though I’m currently making soaps for Valentine’s Day, and exploring new scents for spring, I think I’ll just revel in the holiday spirit a little longer, enjoy a relaxing soak with my Peppermint Twist soap, and sing a few verses of The Twelve Days of Christmas!

“On the first day of Christmas, my true love sent to me a partridge in a pear tree.

On the second day of Christmas, my true love sent to me two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree.

On the third day of Christmas, my true love sent to me three French hens, two turtle doves, and a partridge in a pear tree.

On the fourth day of Christmas, my true love sent to me four Colly* birds, three French hens, two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree.

On the fifth day of Christmas, my true love sent to me five gold rings*!

Six geese a- laying!

Seven swans a-swimming!

Eight maids a-milking!

Nine ladies dancing!

Ten lords a-leaping!

Eleven pipers piping!

Twelve drummers drumming!”

 

*although modern texts often state “calling birds,” the  lyrics listed in the Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes, considered by many to be the authoritative text, lists “Colly birds,” another name for blackbirds.

*golden rings likely refers to ring-necked birds such as the ring-necked pheasant, and not golden jewelry worn on the finger. This is in keeping with the fact that the first seven gifts given by the true love were birds.

Happy Twelve Days of Christmas!

December 22nd, 2011

‘Tis the Season to Use Natural Soap!

Ever notice how your skin always feel dry in the winter? How your legs get a little on the scaley side? How the knuckles on your hands get rough and red? We can thank the drier air outside, and the heating systems inside for contributing to the problem.

But, how can we fix it? Slather on some lotion? Crank up the humidifiers in our homes? Guzzle some water? Absolutely. All of those solutions will certainly give your skin a boost of hydration, and help to ease the discomfort of dryness.

But what else can you do to virtually eliminate dry, tight, itchy skin during the winter months?

Switch from those commercially manufactured drying soaps and bath gels, to handcrafted natural soap!

My customers tell me that their skin never felt as good as it does now that they’ve switched to my olive oil-based soaps. They tell me how they save money now that they’re not buying so much lotion. They tell me how smooth and soft their skin feels. They tell me I’ve turned them into natural soap addicts, and they’ll never go back to their Dove, Dial, Irish Spring or liquid body washes. They are hooked on the amazing feeling that natural soap, with its abundance of humectant (moisture attracting) glycerin has on their skin.

If I haven’t already told you, my handmade soaps are a little different from most other handcrafted soaps out there. Mine is “superfatted.” This means that I add an extra dash of skin-nourishing olive and castor oil when I’m making the soap batter. This extra oil will survive the “lye monster,” and remain unreacted in the finished bars. It lends even more conditioning and moisturizing power to my amazing bars of bubbly goodness. Other companies may make natural soap, but skip this step because of the extra expense.

I believe, on the other hand, that you are worth it! I want you to love the feeling my soap gives your skin, and come back for more! Treat your skin to a moisture-infusing treat this winter.  Treat it to my handcrafted natural soap, available on http://barsoapnatural.com, home of The Natural Bar Soap Company.

Be sure to follow us on Facebook and Twitter for our upcoming show schedules, new soap scents and more!


October 26th, 2011

Get Rid of Windows System Restore Virus

As much as I try to limit myself to the humble craft of soap making, tricky little buggers like computer viruses and malware are training me to moonlight as a forensic computer guru. If only soap and water worked as well on computer viruses as they do on the biological ones!

My latest attack came yesterday at 2:17 pm, when I opened an email from the president of a respected aromatherapy association.  She had attached a pdf file, and a link to a well known essential-oil-expert’s blog. I would expect a large and well-respected organization to have firewalls, and virus protection, and to not be littering the web world with malware. So, I opened the pdf. Then I clicked on the link.

Within seconds, my computer screen displayed a large windows-like box titled “System Control Panel”, with four areas of concern: Computer Status, System Drive Status, System Registry tatus, RAM  Memory Status. There was a button in the lower right corner saying “Start Scanning PC.” When I attempted to check my firewall, or close the browser– anything at all,  new windows warning of critical data loss, critical temperature, Hard Drive failure, etc., popped up. It was quite chaotic. All I wanted to do was learn about essential oils, and now my computer seemed to be toast.

Not knowing any better– I mean, System Restore is a legitimate Windows program that will help restore your computer to a previous state in case of issues…– I went ahead and clicked “Scan.” Then another large white box appeared, with the characteristic blue Windows border that said “System Restore” on the top left side, and said “Scan PC for errors” at the top. It outlined 4 areas of vulnerability, including My Computer, HDD, RAM, and OS  Registry. . It looked A LOT like an authentic windows box. But something just didn’t look right.

I would never expect a REAL Windows program to have “click here to activate full functional version” in the lower left corner. And, it just didn’t seem like my computer could possibly go from working just fine, to having no memory, a ruined hard drive, and registry problems without the help of….. A VIRUS!

Instead of clicking anything else, I turned off the computer at the power strip.  Attempts to reboot my computer resulted in plain blue screens with nothing to click; there were no icons, no options – I couldn’t do anything. The Start button still appeared in the bottom left corner of the screen, but clicking it just opened the normal start window, with NO ICONS in it.

Hm.

If you have been infected by the Windows System Restore Virus, have no fear. Most likely, you can cure your computer. I have found a solution, and am now typing it into the same computer that I thought was forever ruined.

The absolute best way to rid yourself of the System Restore Virus, is to use Bleeping Computer’s tutorial:

http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/virus-removal/remove-system-recovery

I tried another way first, including virus removal by malwarebytes.org (which is part of Bleeping Computer’s solution), but it is totally ineffective without the preparatory steps and follow up steps outlined by Bleeping Computer.

So many of the programs on the web that say they offer free scans and removal of viruses only prove to be total scams, no better than the virus creators themselves. SpywareDoctor and the like lead you through arduous download steps, and scanning steps, only to diagnose your problem and ask you to purchase their software to fix things. Hmmm– System Restore Virus tells you your computer is failing, runs a scan, diagnoses the issue, and then asks you to purchase their software to fix everything. Seems a bit similar…

If Spyware Doctor would disclose UP FRONT that you will not be cured without spending money, I bet many of their downloads wouldn’t even happen. I bet quite a few people get through the downloading process, and are just so frustrated at that point that they say, “WTF!!!! Whatever…. I’ll just pay the dumb money and be done with this….”

DON’T be that person. There are free SOLUTIONS out there. Bleeping Computer’s solution works, and won’t cost you anything but time (about an hour for prep steps, 4 1/2 hours for scanning, and another 1/2 hour for follow up steps). Still, it’s cheaper than hiring a repairman, less frustrating and costly than dealing with Spyware Doctor, and it will allow you to fully use your computer again.

Everything they suggest is FREE. There are even links to the downloads you’ll need. And, it’s especially nice that there’s a forum available if you have questions or further issues.

Why reinvent the wheel when someone else has done it so well?

Nuf said. I gotta go make soap.

Best of luck!

October 13th, 2011

Chemical Free Natural Soap- yeah right.

Today, I learned that soap can be made without chemicals!

It’s really true. NO chemicals!

chemical free soap

I was amazed. When I went to the web site of a leading goat milk soap seller, I saw it for my own eyes. Goat milk soap with the description, “All of our Goat Milk Soaps are handmade and chemical-free.”

I was absolutely stunned and speechless.

At first, I wanted to write to them asking about their amazing discovery of chemical free soap. It seems everyone wants chemical-free these days, and it would be a universe-defying feat to manufacture anything with no chemicals, let alone soap.

I wondered, “What’s in it, if  there aren’t any chemicals?” They couldn’t really expect people to believe it’s chemical-free, could they?

To be chemical-free, it certainly couldn’t be made the regular way, with water and lye like our soaps at The Natural Bar Soap Company. No, that would involve water (chemical name:  dihydrogen monoxide) and lye  (“sodium hydroxide”).

And it most certainly couldn’t be made with goat milk, as the description said, because goat milk is chock FULL of chemicals- things like phenylalanine and tryptophane.

So, I wonder what chemical-free soap is made of?

I guess my point here, is that this company is doing its customers a disservice by

  • exploiting their customers’ ignorance of the fact that EVERYTHING is chemical, just to make a buck.

OR

  • demonstrating their own ignorance concerning ingredients and terminology that, as soap crafters, they should have learned by this point.

I’m sure there are people out there who don’t care about this, and would wonder why I’d even take the time to write about it. I mean, it’s obvious that they couldn’t really mean chemical-free. But my objection is that they knowingly exploit the misunderstanding of  “chemicals” to sell their product.

My reasons for objecting are many. First, I am an honest person. I am happy to tell anyone about the ingredients I use in my soap. Each one is in there for a reason, and each one has a chemical name. I get especially irritated by people who don’t disclose, or even worse, who don’t know anything about the ingredients they put in their products.  I spend a lot of time researching ingredients and regulations to be sure I am doing things safely, honestly, and legally.

Second, as a chemistry geek, I know that just because something has a chemical name, it’s not necessarily bad for us. In fact, many “chemicals” are essential to life (water and air, to name a few).  I am morally opposed to getting sales by  spreading misinformation or fostering fear. I choose instead, to share my knowledge of soap, and win over customers with honesty and great products.

So yes. The Natural Bar Soap Company does manufacture soap with chemicals. We’re proud to offer you quality products made with ingredients.

And yes. You read that right. To make soap without chemicals, would be the equivalent of making soap without ingredients.

We not only assure you that we use ingredients, but that we use wholesome, natural ingredients. Wholesome natural “chemicals,” if you will, to craft our lusciously lathering, bubbly bars of goodness.

And please don’t  fear chemicals, especially ones that are hard to pronounce. Personally, we’re quite proud of the fact that our soaps contain (E)-4-hydroxyphenethyl 4-formyl-3-(2-oxoethyl)hex-4-enoate, the chemical name for the wonderful, all-natural active ingredient in olive oil.

:)

September 22nd, 2011

Facebook Landing Page with Picture Link

add facebook like button

We like Natural Soap!

So, after days of pretending I’m a computer genious like my brother, I finally created a facebook landing page (which you’ll only be able to fully view if you are a facebook member) for The Natural Bar Soap Company. But how to create a link to my website??

Que crickets chirping…

Cricket…

Cricket…

After scouring the internet and deciphering html jargon (computer language that usually means diddly to me),

I DID IT!!!!!

I actually made a (somewhat unattractive) picture, and TURNED the PICTURE into a LINK to my website!!!

Was it easy??

Heck no!

But I figured it out.

I could be nasty and tell you to figure it out on your own, but that’s against my sweet nature. :)

The Simple version of creating a landing page follows. Facebook has a newer app, released in March 2011, that allows not only a landing page, but also a “Reveal” page. I’ll write about that in a future article.

The Simple Landing Page instructions:

Click “Edit Page” at the top of your page, and select “apps” from the left sidebar menu. Now select your Static FBML app (you DO have one of those, right? If not, click here, then click the “add to page” button in the lower left hand corner). Once you select “go to app” you’ll arrive at a screen with two boxes. The first is for a title or greeting for your Landing Page. Name it something. Then, paste the following code into the big box:

<a href=”URL path to external link” title=”Mouseover Description”><img style=”width: XXpx; height: YYpx; border: 0;” src=”Path to image” alt=”Text Description”></a>

-for “URL path to external link,” enter the entire address where you want clicking to take you… for example, http://barsoapnatural.com

-for XX and YY, enter the actual pixels of your picture. Mine are 510 and 380. These can be found by right clicking on your picture. Keep in mind that FB allows a max of 540 for the width, and most people won’t want to scroll down to see an overly long picture. Keep the height reasonable.

-for “Path to Image” enter the entire address of the image you’re using. Include http:// here, too.

-for “Text Description,” name your picture something easy, such as “NaturalSoap.”

Save your changes.

Now, the picture on your landing page should take you to whatever site you have specified, when you click on it.

:)

P.S. The less simple version uses a newer FB app called “Static HTML: iframe tabs”.  I’ll write about that one in a future post.

 

September 22nd, 2011

Why Use Natural Soap?

We Love Natural Soap!

We Love Natural Soap!

Everyone needs to be clean.

And I would bet that everyone would answer, “How do you get clean?” with an easy answer: “Soap.”

But there are SO many soap products out there. Bars, gels, liquids… some are naturally based. Some are totally synthetic. Most do a decent job of making us clean.

So why use natural soap? Why even care about what product we use to get clean, so long as we’re getting there?

Natural Soap contains glycerin. Glycerin is nature’s powerful humectant. It brings moisture to your skin, and moisturizes in a way that no synthetic moisturizer can ever hope to. Glycerin is naturally created when lye reacts with soap making oils, and is in every bar of handmade soap we sell.

Natural Soap very often is scented all naturally too. Every bar of soap we sell at The Natural Bar Soap Company is scented with essential oils (extracted directly from plant sources), or with certified 100% natural fragrance oils. These natural scents not only smell great, but many are known to have aromatherapeutic effects as well.

Natural Soap is gentle and mild when formulated correctly. It cleans dirt away, without stripping your body of protective natural oils.

What do you think about natural soap? Why do you like it?

Tells us here, or on our Facebook Page!

September 22nd, 2011

Soap Making Supplies Coming Soon!

It’s been a busy time around here lately. We’re getting our holiday scents ready for the November and December holiday selling (& bathing!) season, working on a few new lines of bath and body products, including sugar and salt scrubs, special high potency heel lotion to combat winter dryness, and as always, developing new scents to add to our products.

We’re also working to bring the crafty among you some wonderful soap making tools and supplies in the hopes that you’ll join us in our addiction and make some of your own natural soaps. Buckets, spoons, gloves, goggles- we hope to offer the essential soap making tools to our customers that are difficult to find at other soap making supply companies. At some point in the future, we hope to expand into offering soap making ingredients as well.

For now, we’re working hard to get the best pricing we can, from the most reputable companies, including Rubbermaid, Cuisinart, Oxo, and more. Soap making can be rough on supplies- it’s important to invest in durable ones that won’t melt with heat, or degrade in lye solutions.

We’ll keep you posted!

September 4th, 2011

All Natural Beer Soap

It’s September.

School has started.

To me, that means it’s fall. Even though I know the real Autumnal Equinox is not until September 23rd, it might as well be fall now.

I look forward to so many things in the fall. Apple picking followed by apple pie making. Trips to the pumpkin patch. Outings to the park, or to Cunningham Falls. My family and I love to hike through the woods and enjoy the ever-changing leaves. We’ve enjoyed these things for years.

But, in the last couple years, I’ve also started to look forward to one more fall activity. Making beer soap.

I’m not much of a beer drinker. I’ve had many. I’ve liked few. I’m definitely not someone to waste a good beer on, because I don’t appreciate the difference. But I do enjoy beer in other ways. It makes great batter for onion rings. It lends an earthy, cozy taste to a loaf of quick bread. And, it makes amazing soap. The beer soap I make in the fall is scented with an autumnal blend of clove, cinnamon and ginger, and has a touch of wheat germ for exfoliating goodness.

It’s just plain yummy, in a non-edible way, of course! I’ll be making beer soap all week- and it’ll be ready just in time for the actual start of fall.

 

 

August 27th, 2011

Extreme Makeover: Hurricane Edition

Hurrican at Dover Downs

Dover Downs and Hurricane Irene

I can honestly say I much preferred the days on this Extreme Makeover Home Edition build, when it was terribly hot, muggy, and buggy. Our current Hurricane situation is much less conducive to the project!

So, what does a team do when they get evacuated from their homes during an Extreme Makeover project due to a hurricane? We high tail it outta there!

Chris Schell, owner of Schell Brothers construction is such a generous guy- he booked rooms for all of us for the weekend at Dover Downs, a classy Vegas-style hotel and casino in Dover Delaware.

My room is incredible. It’s spacious, bright, immaculate. I’m on the sixth floor, and have a beautiful view of the casino when it’s all lit up at night. I also have a beautiful view of all the rain coming down, but with the highly insulated, thick windows, I can’t hear a thing! And that, my friends, is how I prefer to enjoy a good storm.

 

August 17th, 2011

Extreme Makeover Home Edition and Natural Soap

The EMHE Pep Rally yesterday evening was so much fun!  Not only was I treated to VIP seating, but I got to meet Design Producer Courtney Sanders, and hand her my Natural Bar Soap Company business card, along with the offer to donate bars of my handmade natural soap to help decorate the bathrooms of the new home.  It couldn’t hurt, right? I’ve spent most of the day blogging about the event, and the concert that followed.

I think everyone comes away from community gatherings like this with a renewed sense of purpose, if not much more. I know that I feel really empowered right now- the gist of the rally is to drive home the point that one person can make a difference. A good difference. And the effort doesn’t have to be monumental, or epic- just a willingness to be involved, and to share time or talent with someone else who needs it.

Together, small efforts from everyone can create big, life changing effects. What’s more, this sort of an inspiration-stirring rally is not unlike a wave gathering speed as it comes toward the shore. Each of us who attended the rally likely came away from it full of energy and optimism, and shared that with other people we encountered today. The resulting wave of excitement will continue gathering speed as we head into next week and Announcement day!

On August 22, Ty Pennington will surprise one very lucky family in need of a transformation, with his famous “Goooooood Morning” wake up call. They’ll be whisked away on a family vacation, while Schell Brothers and their team of 7000 volunteers perform their magic.  4 1/2 days later, the family will move into their brand new home.

I can’t wait to be there to capture inside stories for you, of the people and companies that make this all possible. Please bookmark my blog, so you can check the happenings daily. Any supportive comments are welcome and encouraged! You may even see your thoughts in a future blog! Check http://schellbrothers.com/extreme/blog/ for my Schell Brothers blog contributions.

August 12th, 2011

Extreme Makeover Home Edition Sussex County DE Build, August 2011

Wow!

That basically sums up my emotions today. I wasn’t expecting today to be anything out of the ordinary, but one phone call changed everything.

Just who called? My brother. Not unusual- he calls me pretty regularly to ask how business is going, give me suggestions for improving my website, and sometimes just to check in. But today was different. He called to tell me about a “special assignment.”

I’ve been writing real estate articles for him for a few years now, so it’s not unusual that he would call with a “special assignment.” But this time, it was a REALLY special assignment. The Schell Brothers, owners of the real estate brokerage he once sold under, also own a top-rate construction business, and have been selected by Extreme Makeover: Home Edition to build a new home in Sussex County, Delaware for a deserving family.  My brother’s IT friend, Jeremy, who now works for Schell Brothers, needed to round up a media team for Schell to cover all of the events around the build. Remembering that I blogged for my brother, and also blog about Soap, he offered me a place on his team! As exciting as this is, I’m hoping I’ll have an opportunity to share some of my handmade soap with the production crew, the deserving family, and any one else who may need a bar.

Being selected as a “guest blogger” gives me VIP access to the site, the events, the everything!!!! To say I’m a bit excited is as understated as saying that driving the Bay Bridge doesn’t bother me a bit (it petrifies me!!).

Stay tuned to my blog for updates. We’ll be attending the kick off Pep Rally this Tuesday evening (Aug 16) at Henlopen High School in Lewes, DE. It’s free- and it will include a concert by Teully Leung– a Glee star!- among other performers. I’m looking forward to a lot of fun!

 

August 10th, 2011

Custom Handmade Soap

Very excited today, to have been asked to custom make and label soaps for a historic Inn in our area. If you’re interested in offering custom labeled, handmade natural soaps to your customers, please send us a note! We’re happy to work with you to create just the look you’re after.

August 5th, 2011

FAQ’s About Natural Soap

My favorite way to sell my handmade natural products is in person, where I can interact with my customers, and share my love of soap directly with people who are interested in it. Very often, my best customers are the ones who may not ever have intended to buy a bar of soap, but stopped to chat, learned something new, and then, intrigued by what they heard, decided to give my soap a try.

I think there are a few facts about natural soap that I commonly share, that people are surprised to hear.

1. Natural soap isn’t harsh- even though it’s technically “Lye Soap.”

The average person thinks that Lye Soap is something different from Natural Soap, when they are in fact, one and the same.

Old fashioned lye soap, made by our great great grandmothers has a bad reputation for being harsh. This was because wood ash was used as their source for lye, and it was difficult to determine the concentration of the resulting lye solution. It could be stronger or weaker depending on the quality of the ash.

Today’s natural lye soap is made with standardized lye pellets or beads. There is no guesswork in how strong the lye solution will be.  This allows our soap formulas to be gentle, and properly balanced every time.

2. Clear glycerin soap is not the same as handmade natural soap.

What I know to be glycerin soap, is the clear sort of bar soap that is made by melting down a larger block of clear premade soap bought at a craft store. This soap is far inferior to our natural soap. Glycerin soap is quite often loaded with synthetic ingredients that are drying or sticky and produces bars that have little if any bubbly lather. Glycerin is a wonderful moisturizing component of natural soap, but glycerin alone cannot provide cleansing power.

The oils we use to create our handmade natural soap transform into sodium salts that provide wonderfully gentle cleansing as well. Also, clear bars of made-from-scratch handmade soap are difficult, if impossible to create at home. Be wary of anyone claiming to make their own clear soaps from scratch. And, especially be wary of using clear glycerin soaps as full body soaps. You will most likely not enjoy the feel of them, or the resulting feel of your skin.

3. The gentle cleansing and moisturizing ability of natural soap is unrivaled.

Your skin is your largest organ. It responds to the environment, to the foods you eat, to the clothes you wear, and especially to the products you put on it. When we blend our lye solution with oils, we get soap and glycerin. In other words, the glycerin is created in the process. Glycerin is one of the best natural moisturizers for your skin. It is the glycerin component of natural soap that makes it so wonderful!  Your skin will be naturally moisturized, rather than slathered with synthetic, drying, petroleum based moisturizers. We have experienced it ourselves, and our repeat customers constantly share their positive experiences with us. Handmade Natural Soap just feels better on skin.

As far as little known facts about natural soap, these are the top three I share with visitors at my craft shows. If I could just get anyone looking at my soap to understand these three facts, I bet each and every one would try a bar and become addicted!

 

July 23rd, 2011

Natural Bar Soap Company is on Vacation!

…sort of.

We’ll be using the next week to round up new stock piles of soap making supplies, gather new ideas for natural soap recipes, and explore craft show booths selling natural soap. After that, we’ll return to the soap MAKING end of this business- making batches of all natural soapy goodness for your skin, satiny smooth lip balms and lotions, and maybe even a few new products to tickle your senses.

Natural Soap Molds

All natural, handmade soap

Please feel free to continue to  place on line orders- they will be shipped out as soon as we’re back on August 1st.

Happy summer!

Erin

owner, http://barsoapnatural.com

The Natural Bar Soap Company

 

July 5th, 2011

Small Businesses are NOT Exempt from the New HR2359 The Safe Cosmetics Act 2011

It just figures that our government would wait to release the full text of the newly proposed HR 2359 Safe Cosmetics Act 2011 until a National Holiday like the 4th of July. I think they believe we were all too wrapped up in grilling our hot dogs and burgers, and watching fireworks to care about something as insignificant as a teeny, tiny bill that could ultimately wipe out our entrepreneurial businesses.

For anyone who hasn’t been following this issue, allow me to summarize.

The FDA regulates food and cosmetics. They are charged with enforcing the Food and Drug Act, a set of regulations that prohibit the use of toxic chemicals, specify labeling standards and ingredient disclosure, and provide a reporting and notification procedure should unsafe products be suspected. Adequate funding and a few revisions would allow the current law to be effective.

However, someone wants more money and less competition, and would rather create new legislation. Simply throw in a few carrots for small business, such as exemption from fees and certain registration requirements, hide the entire smothering, suffocating, job-killing monster full of regulation and fees under the friendly sounding title “The Safe Cosmetics Act,” and you’d think they’ve got this thing in the bag.

In the current Go Green atmosphere of the 21st century, public support for anything natural sounding is easy to come by. Who wouldn’t want to support a bill called “The Safe Cosmetics Act,” especially when so many people believe  that cancer causing toxic chemicals are allowed in our cosmetics?  This anti-toxic-filth movement has been perpetuated by powerful lobbying groups. They’ve worked hard to help build and sustain an atmosphere of distrust of the cosmetic industry, creating cute animated YouTube videos that sound convincing, make unsubstantiated claims, and quote bad science to induce a panic among all of us. They suggest that toxic chemicals aren’t regulated, that lead is “put” into lipstick by uncaring manufacturers, and that the products we all use daily are responsible for surging cancer rates.  Consumers, who often know little about real chemistry or science, believe this, and jump on the bandwagon supporting bad legislation that profits no one but the lobbying groups, and ultimately hurts consumers.

How do these groups (we all know who they are) profit from this legislation? First, the proposed legislation gives them carte blanche to file claims against businesses should they have “ANY reason whatsoever” to believe a product is misbranded. This gives them a ridiculous amount of power, as far as wiping small businesses out of the arena. Second, they could profit tremendously by ensuring that their database, and their bad science become the go-to source in deciding which chemicals will and will not be permitted in products should this bill pass.

Let’s learn a bit about these groups, shall we? One of the groups, created and manages an online database of chemicals and cosmetics, which allows users to identify the supposed health hazards of the ingredients found in their cosmetics. It assigns hazard ratings to each, and looks quite scientific and well-founded, but has been publicly attacked for being anything but.  The other group is actually an off-shoot of the first, and produces cutesy YouTube videos about hot button issues, garnering support for their causes, using scare tactics, broad generalizations and bad science to encourage the public to believe things that just aren’t true. Did I mention that both are huge political lobbying groups? Do you think now, that perhaps there’s something in it for them if a Safe Cosmetics Act can be passed into law?

Last year, HR 5786 The Safe Cosmetics Act 2010, was introduced, but was ultimately defeated due to its lack of exemptions for small cosmetic businesses. EWG and CSFC spent millions trying to rally support for it, but thankfully, indie businesses prevailed. Through an aggressive anti-Safe Cosmetics Act campaign, small cosmetic businesses were able to squelch the bill.

Unfortunately, a newly updated version of the bill was introduced in Congress on June 24, 2011, and we find ourselves defending why we are against The Safe Cosmetics Act, once again. This time, it’s HR2359, named, not surprisingly at all, The Safe Cosmetics Act 2011. Not very original, but effective, since of course, no one in their right mind would want to be anti-Safe Cosmetics, right? Before the bill’s text was even available to read, people had chosen sides. I withheld my decision until I could see what changes had been made.

The last time around, Indie’s were upset that there weren’t exemptions for small businesses. Well, in all fairness, this time around we got what we wanted, at least as far as that one issue is concerned. There IS an exemption for small business, BUT it only exempts us from registration and fee requirements. There are still disclosure requirements that will essentially require our products to be tested in order to discover minute amounts of “contaminants” in the formulations.

There are reporting standards that only allow for a 24 hour window of action. Better keep those business lines open on weekends! This will practically create the need for us to keep lawyers on hand 24 hours a day, in order to defend against unwarranted claims and supposed failure to act.

We will be required not only to keep toxic chemicals out of our products, a requirement already mandated by the FDA, but we will also be required to not use products which might be determined to be unsafe down the road. This would require us to have an omnipotent knowledge of these things.

Another important point, is that should a product be determined or even thought to be unsafe, anyone who has used the product will be notified. This will require a record of each and every person you have sold your product to. For those of us who participate in craft fairs, this will be a nightmarish record keeping task. “Please provide complete contact information, mam, so that I can notify you if the ingredients in my product are ever suspected of being a health hazard.” Can you imagine keeping track of thousands and thousands of customers? For what length of time? Indefinitely? Even tax records are only required for a 7-year span…

Then there are huge perception problems that will be created with passage of this bill. Small companies, who, lucky for us will be exempt from all the registration mandates (yay for us!!!), could be perceived as being “unregulated,” and therefore unsafe (hey- that’s not fair!). After all, no one is watching what we’re putting in our natural-ingredient-laden, untested products, right? Large corporations could use that as an easy advertising campaign against the small businesses that have actually been making the most natural, unadultered and safe products all along.

How about those of us who private label? Because of mandated transparency provisions in the bill, you would have to disclose your complete supply chain. Everyone will now have potential access to the same product you once thought was your “Signature Blend.”

Finally, do you really think being exempted from fees is going to save you money? Nope. Larger corporations, who supply your suppliers, think Cargill, will certainly fall under the umbrella of regulation, and wind up paying huge fees. How does this effect you? The cost of your supplies will go up, as these corporations attempt to minimize the impact of the new fees on their bottom line.

As I have learned from reading, re-reading, and dissecting the new bill, small businesses aren’t really exempt at all. We’re put in the unfortunate position of having giant red and white striped targets strapped to our backs, paying more for supplies, and having to keep file cabinets full of, most likely, useless information. And why? Because someone wants to make some money.

Please help us defeat HR2359. We want to keep making the safe, natural products you’ve come to trust and that your skin craves. With simple updates to current listings of unapproved chemicals, and appropriate funding to allow enforcement, the current FDA act adequately protects the public from adulterated, unsafe products.

You Can Help by Signing the Petition to Stop HR2359.

 

 

 

June 28th, 2011

HR2359 The Safe Cosmetics Act 2011

Oh my. It seems we’re in this again. Another bill has been presented in Congress attempting to help clean up the ingredients found in our cosmetics. Will this bill provide the reforms we need and support Indie Cosmetic Businesses that are dedicated to making safe products? Or, will this bill merely increase regulation without noticeable benefit to consumers?

While many of us are absolutely FOR safe cosmetics, and absolutely AGAINST toxic chemicals in the products we use on our bodies, we at The Natural Bar Soap Company feel it is very important to not take a stance on supporting or not supporting proposed legislation, until we read the full text of a bill. The parts of a proposed bill that will affect us the most, are often found in seemingly minute details.

In the case of HR2359, The Safe Cosmetics Act of 2011, the full text is still not available. There are many many blog sites that purport to tell us what the bill is about, and the specifics of this proposed law. However, even though the bill was presented to the Congress on June 24th, the text has not been released by The Government Printing Office, as of June 28, 2011 for us to read.

Until we see the text, we will not take a position. We obviously need to change something, as current FDA laws that prohibit filth in our cosmetics are not being enforced, and many known-to-be-harmful chemicals are showing up in the body products we use daily. However, change for the sake of change, is not necessarily a good thing. It must be GOOD change.

This link to the Library of Congress, will allow you to read The Safe Cosmetics Act when it becomes available. At that time, we can all read the bill, and decide whether or not this bill is the good change we need.

http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c112:H.R.2359:

 

June 28th, 2011

My Biggest Natural Soap Batches Yet! :)

I’ll just start this blog by saying I love my customers. You each make me feel so good about the soaps I’m making!

That said, it’s because of you that I have to work even harder. And I love that, too. It seems that I’ve made some really good soaps that many of you are really really addicted to, and that means I have to crank up production. It seems only fair that since I am partly to blame for your natural soap addiction, I should be there for you, to supply your new habit!!

So, today, I made new soap molds. I doubled my 6 1/2 pound mold, and will  begin, from now one, making 13 1/2 pound batches of my most in-demand natural soaps. These molds are incredible! Each one can make 27 bars of wonderfully bubbly, lusciously lathering bars of all natural soap. Did I happen to mention that 27 is my lucky number? It always seems to pop up when something great is about to happen.

Natural Soap Molds

My New 13.5 pound natural soap molds

Thanks so much to all of you who have made it necessary for me to make larger batches. I am elated about your enthusiasm for my soaps, and want nothing more than to bring you the soaps you’ve come to love, in the quantities you wish to order, whenever  the mood strikes you. But, enough writing. I’m off to make more soap!

 

 

June 25th, 2011

HR2359 The Safe Cosmetics Act of 2011, Safe Cosmetics ActTo Amend Title VI of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to Ensure the Safe Use of Cosmetics and For Other Purposes.

Almost a full year ago, I blogged about HR5786, The Safe Cosmetics Act that was presented in the 111th Congress in July 2010. Small cosmetic businesses around the country rose to the occasion and voiced our disapproval of this bill that would impose overreaching regulations on our entrepreneurial endeavors.

Groups such as Donna Maria’s Indie Business Network began circulating petitions gathering support for the bill’s opposition. The Handcrafted Soapmaker’s Guild established a Legislative Advocacy Committee, and solicited donations for a Legislative Advocacy Fund to fight the proposed legislation. We were all appalled that the government would impose product testing requirements on those of us using ingredients that are GRAS (generally regarded as safe), that nightmarish paperwork and data submission requirements would be imposed on us, and that trace elements in our ingredients would need to be discovered and disclosed on our labels, potentially even minute particles found in water (which vary depending on the water’s source).

We were particularly upset that small businesses would fall under the same umbrella of restrictions and regulations that large corporations would be subject to. What was being presented as an effort to ensure safe cosmetics did little to help that cause or protect the public, and instead buried small business under stacks of unnecessary, burdensome regulation.

On June 24th, a newly written bill, HR2359 The Safe Cosmetics Act to Amend Title VI of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act to Ensure Safe Cosmetics and For Other Purposes was presented to the 112th Congress, sponsored by Rep. Janice Schakowsky (D-Il), Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D, WI) and Rep. Edward Markey (D-MA).  The new legislation is co-sponsored by:

Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA)

Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR)

Rep. Judy Chu, (D-CA)

Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL)

Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA)

Rep. James Moran (D-VA)

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Shultz (D-FL)

Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-CA)

HR2359 has been referred to the House Education and the Workforce committee, and the House Energy and Commerce committee, to discuss the provisions of the bill that fall under each respective committees’ jurisdiction.

It will be interesting to see how the concerns of the small business cosmetic industry are addressed in the new bill. As of 12:30am June 26, the text of HR2359 had not been released by the Government Printing Office. Apparently, after a bill is presented to the Congress, it can take a few days for the text to be made public, and sometimes longer, if the GPO is experiencing a back log of print requests.

Ideally, we would like to see exemptions for small businesses. We would like exemptions for products labeled as “Soap,” which do not currently fall under the Food and Drug Act’s jurisdiction. We would also like to be able to use ingredients without restriction, so long as they are already GRAS. As an industry, we welcome legislation that prohibits the use of toxic chemicals in cosmetic products, but demand that such legislation recognizes that many chemicals that are toxic at high levels, are perfectly safe at lower levels. We want legislation that is based on true science, rather than over-generalizing, fear inducing databases such as EWG’s Skin Deep database.  Legislation should above all, be applied fairly and reasonably, and not cause unnecessary fear or burden.

President and CEO Lezlee Westine, of The Personal Care Products Council made the following comment regarding presentation of the new HR2359 Safe Cosmetics Act two days ago.

“We are still reviewing the provisions of Rep. Schakowsky’s new bill, but we   are very concerned that, as written, it contains provisions that will place unnecessary burdens on (the) FDA and businesses of all sizes and may compromise jobs without providing meaningful benefits to consumers. Strong federal safety requirements already govern cosmetics and personal care products sold in the U.S. The safety of cosmetic and personal care products in the U.S. is overseen by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act), which requires that all cosmetics be substantiated for safety before they are marketed, contain no prohibited ingredients, and that all labeling and packaging be in compliance with U.S. regulations. Under the FD&C Act it is a crime to market an unsafe cosmetic product.”

We the people should demand safe cosmetics, but we should also demand laws that serve the public interest, not special interest and lobbying groups. I am looking forward to the text of the new HR2359 to be released to discover whether or not our elected policy makers were listening when we objected so loudly to HR5786.

June 24th, 2011

Selling Natural Soap at a Craft Fair

Alrighty- the car is loaded up with my tent, tables, display stand, soaps, lotions, lip balm, signs, chair, tablecloths… It’s time for this weekend’s craft show!

As much as I try to anticipate how much of each soap to bring, each show is different, and I’ve still never quite gotten it right. I always end up selling out of several varieties, but it’s very unpredictable which ones those will be. So, let me just set minds at ease now- I’m always making soap, and if I’m out of the one you wanted, you can be assured that there will be more coming soon. And, if you miss me at a show, you can always order on our website, http://barsoapnatural.com, and use the code PICKUP to get a credit that will cover the shipping costs (if you’re picking up, of course!).

This show is a new venue for me. It’s the Mountaintop Heritage Festival at Fort Ritchie in Cascade, Maryland. The setting is beautiful- a large park with beautiful stone buildings that was once home to a military base. There is a picturesque lake, and beautiful wooded views all around. The weather is supposed to be nice, too, which is definitely a plus for an outdoor show. Fort Ritchie’s Community Center hosts several shows each year. I did well at their spring show- I met some new vendor friends, and also welcomed many new natural soap addicts into our tent.

I’m trying to remember all the last minute things I need to bring- water, munchies, my FULLY CHARGED cell phone… (too many times have I realized the morning of a show that I have little to no battery left).

I’m excited for tomorrow. It’s always fun to get to talk to people about my soaping adventure. The lovely compliments I hear all day energize me and get my creative juices flowing. I have several 6 pound batches of soap oils measured out and ready to be transformed into silky smooth natural soap when I get home from the show tomorrow night. Something about being at a show always makes me want to come home and make soap.

Hope to see you this weekend!

 

June 21st, 2011

Don’t Underrate the Importance of Being Happy

Creative Natural Soap

Today I'm gonna be happier than a swirly soap!

I think I’ve had one of the best days ever in my soap making career. Did I make any soap? Nope. Did I discover a great new ingredient? Nope. Did I get a boatload of sales? Nope. So why am I having such a great day?

I’ve recently had issues with suppliers, and have written about how hard it can be to move on, and do things differently than how I’ve always done them. I’ve had a lot of ups and downs this week, to say the least. But today, I think I experienced an epiphany of sorts. None of this should be getting me down.

It’s all just a bump in the road- a learning experience, an opportunity to be even better than I was. Just plow through those rough waters, and you’re sure to find smooth sailing ahead.

I’ve finally made it to those tranquil seas, and it’s a happier,”I’m glad that’s over” and ready to move on kind of place.

People vastly underestimate the value of being happy. But happiness is so important. It effects how we view ourselves, how we treat others, how we take on the day or hide from it. Happiness serves as a catalyst. Happiness is contagious. Happiness has curative properties. Happiness is everything.

Years ago in college, I started a “quote journal,” and filled it with quotes and sayings that I cut and pasted from magazines, papers, and the like.

Looking through it today, I was reminded of a great one.

“I Choose To Be Happy.”

Why choose anything else?

June 20th, 2011

Why I Have New Sources for Wholesale Soap Making Supplies

If you’ve read my Top 10 Ways to Keep a Customer, it’ll be easy to understand why I’ve found two new suppliers this week. My favorite Wholesale Soap Making Supplies company decided to discontinue a popular program- namely,  a 25% discount for picked-up orders.

They took away the discount. I was upset. I called them and voiced my discontent with their decision. They countered by saying I could still pick up my orders, if I’d like to.

The catch?

There would be no discount.

Hm.

I searched their website and found what I thought would be my golden ticket to savings. “PRICE MATCH GUARANTEE!!” “We are so confident that you will not find lower prices elsewhere, that we are happy to offer our price match guarantee! Simply find a lower price, complete our form, and you’ll hear back right away.”

I frantically searched the internet for better pricing, and guess what? It wasn’t that hard. I really should have done more of that before I became so loyal to them in the first place! Armed with information and pricing, I completed a form for some essential oils, base oils, and  butters.

They call back and say they will not match prices with my competitors because the products are not identical. Well, I submitted a 50 lb. pail of oil, to their 30 pound paid, but broke it down per pound. Alright. Maybe they figure their prices can’t compare with bulk pricing. Lavender 40/42 oil? Looks the same to me. Same product. An industry standardized blend of variously sourced lavender oil to ensure a consistent product. Nope. They say it’s not the same. Theirs is better quality. There’s is “PURE.”

What??? 40/42 is Standardized!! There is no quality difference. And, 40/42 isn’t technically “pure” since it is a blend.

Patchouli Oil. Certified pure. Certified 100% natural.

Nope. They say it’s inferior quality to theirs. How do they know this? I’m told it’s because the competitor’s price is so low, that’s how you can tell “You get what you pay for.” Actually, the competitor’s price is so low, because the wholesale supplies place’s is so high, and because the competitor isn’t a middleman, but a direct source.

I tire of their schenanigans. It’s clear they never intended to price match. They just wanted me to exhaust myself searching for lower pricing. Well, I’m exhausted alright, but I found lower prices. And, in my searching, I found two great suppliers who WANT my business, with lower pricing, and BETTER (certified organic and certified sustainable) products. Because they typically work with large companies, I have to purchase a little bit larger quantities, but my business is growing. That isn’t a problem.

Thank you for offering the Price Match Guarantee, old wholesale supplies place. You made me do your work for you, finding better pricing. You made me work really hard to stay your customer. You made me learn even more about essential oils, certification procedures and documents, and what 100% Pure really means. In the process, I found out that you lie about your products and misrepresent them, and I discovered you know as much about natural ingredients as you do about how to fix microwave ovens. But, I thank you anyway, because, were it not for your price match guarantee, I would still be relying on you for information, and paying higher prices than I need to, for inferior products.

Incidentally, our new supplier for essential oils is amazing. They are an American company, still family owned and operated after 103 years. They directly source their essential oils from all over the world. Their perfume laboratories house the most advanced processing equipment in the industry, and they employ world renowned perfumery chemists. Best of all, they are honest in their dealings with customers, and offer certification disclosure for each of their certified all-natural fragrances and 100% pure essential oils. With this new supplier, I feel that I can get the ingredients I need, but also the information I need to run a respected business. They know their stuff, and kindly and generously share information. They are THE authority in the fragrance industry.

Our new soap making oil supplier offers not only sustainably sourced oils, but also 100% Certified Organic oils, at prices comparable to our old supplier’s non-organic pricing. Going green has never been better!

It’s a great day to make Soap!

June 20th, 2011

Top Ten Ways to Keep a Customer

If the current economy has gotten you and your business down, consider these 10 ways to keep the customers you’ve worked so hard to get!

10. Don’t lie to your customers just to keep them around. Sooner or later, they’ll become wise to your schemes, and you’ll lose their trust.

9. If you don’t know the answer to a question they ask, tell them you will try to find the answer, and call them back. Never finish a conversation with “I’m sorry I just don’t know.” Chances are, someone will know the answer, and your customer will become theirs.

8. If you don’t have the product your customer wants, get it. There are a limited number of customers buying right now- give them the products they came to you to buy.

7. Follow Through on commitments- phone calls, delivery/shipment dates, etc. They are counting on you to do what you promised. Don’t let them down.

6. Staff your phones with courteous, interested people. They are responsible for creating your company’s first impressions.

5. Know your products. Be sure your sales people know their products.Do not simply be a middleman. Arm yourself with knowledge about what you sell, what makes it good, what makes it different, and be able to communicate these things to your customers.

4. If you are selling “100% Certified….,” make the certification documents available to your customers. Transparency builds trust.

3.  Do not make your customers do your work. Low price guarantees sound good, but are they really? Your customer will have to do the legwork, discover lower prices, and if you’re really lucky, come back to you to purchase. In most cases, the customer will just buy from your competitor. You could have had the sale, if you were willing to survey your competition, and set your prices accordingly.

2. Show interest in your customer. They want to feel that they’ve made a great decision in choosing your product. Reinforce that feeling. Check back to see how they’re doing with it. Consider offering a discount on a future purchase in exchange for an honest rating of their new product.

1. Don’t make your customer work harder to stay your customer, than you do to keep them. If you want their business, go after it. Do not make them guess when you’ll be open, when the item will be in stock, when it will be on sale, who has it for less, which store has the better product, etc. Honest communication, that shows your expertise and interest will go a long way in developing a relationship with your customer. Customers who feel connected will come back to you. Customers who are treated indifferently will go elsewhere.

June 16th, 2011

Cost of Wholesale Soap Making Supplies

When you get used to something, it’s hard to give it up.

My kids have a great little book called “Froggy Fable.” It tells the story of a frog, who, accustomed to his little froggy cave on the banks of a beautiful river, starts to experience changes that he doesn’t like. A family of beavers moves in and cuts down many beautiful trees. A family of birds moves in and disturb the quiet with their squawking. The frog is miserable, and unsure of what to do about any of it, when suddenly, his little cave is invaded by a child who scoops him up in a mason jar, straps him to the back of a bike, and takes him far away.  Along the ride, the jar bounces off of the bike, and the frog finds himself in a strange new place. He’s not happy at all. He’s scared, and alone, and everything is unfamiliar. He longs for the comfort of home, even though it had become different from what he had always known. Of course, the frog finds his way back home, and realizes that when things change,  it may take some getting used to, but you just might find that the changes aren’t that bad after all.

I’m not there yet.

My favorite wholesale soap making supplies company recently told me they would no longer offer me a discount for picking up my orders. About a year ago, they announced Free Shipping on Everything! Sort of. They adjusted some of their prices, and added shipping costs to all of their products, except essential oils and fragrances. By picking up my orders, they gave me a nice discount, 25% off everything. This gave me pretty good pricing on most things, and an extra 25% off on essential oils. That was a deal.

To say it was convenient to pick up my soap making supplies is a misstatement. They are 5 hours away from my home. But, they are en-route to my out-of-state family, so a visit home, meant an opportunity to pick up soap supplies.

Now, without that discount, I’m stuck paying for shipping that I really don’t need, and I’m no longer getting essential oils at such a low price. They offer a “lowest price guarantee” but they have made their stipulations so stringent, it seems intentional that they didn’t intend on approving any of the price match requests. For example, if I find an essential oil for less elsewhere, it must be identical to theirs. If I want to price match their 40/42 lavender essential oil, the competitor’s oils must be labeled “Certified 100% Pure” on the label, or they will not price match. Their oil is produced and packaged specifically for them. Other companies do not label 40/42 lavender 100% pure because it is not pure. It is a standardized blend of lavender oils. The fact that it is a blend, means it is not ‘PURE’.  But, their supplier “certifies” their 40/42 product as “pure.” Price matching essential oils will be impossible.

So, I’m in a state of muddled mess right now. Do I continue to order from them? My froggy story compels me to. Afterall, I have always enjoyed the relationship I have had with the company. They are friendly, and they have almost everything I need. I just feel like the prices jumped up 25%.

What’s a girl to do? I was going to write a scathing blog about them- but then I decided to get off my proverbial soap box, and just deal with the fact that things change. I can’t prevent it. I’ll keeping looking for better priced ingredients. But for now, I guess I’ll  just accept the changes. Afterall, I need supplies.

It’s time to make soap.

May 19th, 2011

The Role of GreenPalm in the RSPO

Palm Oil continues to be a source of great debate, although much progress is being made to ensure it is produced in sustainable ways. GreenPalm is  a global organization that is working hard to combat the social and environmental issues that result from the production of palm oil.

When manufacturers and retailers make and sell palm oil items covered by the GreenPalm program, they provide incentives and rewards to palm oil producers for their efforts to produce palm in socially and environmentally responsible ways. The program provides a way for participants to inform their customers about their efforts, and to earn more for their palm crops through the selling of Green Palm palm oil certificates.

The following is a letter I received this morning from Bob Norman of GreenPalm. I hope you’ll take a minute to read it, and also to share the information with others. It is imperative that while satisfying global demand for palm oil, we, in turn, demand that it is done so in a responsible way.

“The global perspective

GreenPalm enables RSPO certified palm oil producers to earn more for their efforts, wherever the palm oil is produced, whether or not they export to Europe. Since only a small proportion of palm oil producers actually export to Europe, this is of great significance. GreenPalm is engaged therefore in a much wider campaign, with global reach, rather than limiting itself to producers who already deliver to Europe.

Similarly, GreenPalm also offers a means for end-users of palm oil, wherever they are in the world, and whether or not other RSPO certified options are available to them, to support sustainable production and make a real difference. It also allows users of palm or palm kernel derivatives (which are not yet available from certified sustainable sources in sufficient quantities) to contribute to sustainable production and make supporting claims. The really good news is that they’re doing so in ever increasing numbers.

So far GreenPalm certificate sales have supported the production to 1.8 million tonnes of certified sustainable material, which is more than twice the volume of other supply chains put together. As a result, RSPO certified producers have earned $14 million in additional income for their efforts and $1.8 million has been raised to support the work of the RSPO into the process.

RSPO audited, transparent and credible

This has been achieved as every aspect of the GreenPalm programme is RSPO approved, credible and transparent, with strong and clear rules. Every certificate sold is directly supporting RSPO certified production from audited producers. Buyers and redeemers of GreenPalm certificates are recorded, and open to public scrutiny, on the GreenPalm website.

They include many of the world’s most respected brands: Unilever, United Biscuits, Cadbury’s, Cargill, Carrefour, Kellogg’s, Kraft, Marks and Spencer, Nestle, Oriflame, Premier Foods, Ginsters, Shell and Waitrose to name but a few. Each takes its CSR policy and reputation seriously, and their ongoing support is a testimony to the credibility and viability of GreenPalm.

In our view each RSPO supply chain option has a valid role to play. GreenPalm has played the biggest role so far and in an innovative, credible and transparent way has incentivised sustainable production around the world and helped to take the RSPO forward in making a better world. We thank you for your continuing support.”

The Natural Bar Soap Company only uses palm oil from sustainable sources to hand make our natural soap. We hope you’ll do your part, as well, and encourage companies you do business with to use and support sustainable palm oil as well.Your small steps toward environmental and social responsibility become large strides when combined with the efforts of other. No one is too insignificant to make a difference.

For more information about GreenPalm, please visit their website, by clicking here.

For information on the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, click here.

May 5th, 2011

Rose Soap!

It’s spring, and I’m getting excited! Several of our natural soap selections depend on ingredients from our garden, and winter has a way of shutting down production of  those. But, as each new sunny day dawns, I look forward to again being able to collect some of my most anticipated botanicals- namely, chickweed, chamomile and rose petals.

My chickweed patch is going crazy this spring, and has multiplied a hundred times over what was there last year. The infusions I make with chickweed are great additions to my lip balms and salves. Our chamomile patch is green and lush, and I’m eager to see those first tiny buds form and blossom. When dried, the flowers create just enough scrubby goodness for our Chamomile Neroli Soap. The last to bloom will be my heirloom rose bushes which supply the petals we dry and crush for our Rose Soap. These rose petals are the botanical I most look forward to. Ordinary rose petals just don’t compare to those from my heirloom bushes. Mine are so sweet and tiny, and they dry just perfectly.

This year, I just have to remember to harvest enough of these favorites to  last through next winter. There’s nothing worse than having a soap making addiction, and not being able to make the soap I want to make because I’m out of the special ingredients I need.

Rose Soap will be back in stock soon. I’m just waiting for the bush to bloom.

Thank you for your patience, and for loving our soaps!

Erin