Joy-Sparking Soaps

“Does it spark joy?” This seems to be the question we’re hearing most commonly lately as the Konmari Method of tidying up sweeps throughout the country. We started “doing the Konmari thing” last weekend, and I’ll be talking about that process soon in future posts. As I was spending time to myself yesterday, letting thoughts drift in and out of the ether, I spent a bit of time focusing on my products. I make them, I use them, and I so often take them for granted, so this was a great chance for me to remember the joy in each product.

How to approach this? Do I start chronologically to my making journey? Do I begin with the core four of my brand? I’m going to begin with Au Naturel. This soap began as Soap of Milk & Honey (and Oatmeal!), and it brings happiness. When I made my very first batch of this soap, I knew pretty much nothing about gelling temps and how both insulating the soap and sugars in the soap increased them. I’d insulated my mould and left it alone. When I unmoulded my soap the next day, it was dark and had caverns, complete with soapy stalactites and stalagmites. Plus, it oozed oil. What in the world??? My gelling temperature had gotten so hot that it caused separation. Over time, the oil absorbed into the soap, but there was no fixing the caverns. It was divine to use, nonetheless. It’s so rare that a bar of this soap makes it to my shower that I do a happy dance when the stars align and it happens. This one is an incredible, gentle, uber-moisturizing head-to-toe treat.

The next soap that harkens back to my humble beginnings is Goat’s Milk & Lavender, originally Ooh La Lavender. This is another goat’s milk soap, and I still have a bar from the original batch stashed away on a rack. I want to use it, because after nearly 11 years, it’ll be so incredibly mellow, but then again, I don’t, because it’s special. This is another one of those soaps that brings happiness when I get to use it, partly because of the rarity of the event. It has lavender oil in it along with vitamin-rich goat’s milk. It’s incredibly moisturizing and has a completely relaxing fragrance.

The next soap that has been a part of my collection from the early days is Lemon Grove Gardener’s Soap. Back in the days when I made soap exclusively by the melt & pour method, I made and sold this scent in a bright yellow glycerin bar. In fact, one night I dreamed about how to make, package, and market four soaps that were scented with these four custom created scents I’d developed. Lemon Grove was one of them. It is a special blend of essential oils, and when I started making cold-processed soaps, I decided to craft this into a gardener’s soap, complete with cornmeal for grit and calendula petals for interest. This one shows up in my shower more frequently than the other two soaps mentioned here; in fact, there’s a sniglet of a bar of this one in my shower now.

In my next post, I’ll be sharing with you the joy that I feel with my “core 4”: Outer Banks, Crystal Coast Morning, Kure Beach, and Ocean Isle.

Which one of these is your favorite or on your must-try list?

Au Naturel is the BEST Soap for Troubled Skin

Do you have troubled skin?  Problem skin?  Skin that acts like a hormonally moody teenager – acting right one moment, irritating you the next?  Then have I got a soap for you!  At event after event, through Facebook messages and emails, customers often ask me,

I have psoriasis and eczema.  Do you have any soap that will cure that?

My answer is always, “No.  None of my soaps will cure skin diseases.”

However, I have a lot of customers who have tried Au Naturel (formerly known as Soap of Milk & Honey – and Oatmeal) and have come back with nothing but praise for it with reports that it has helped their skin tremendously.

Au Naturel Soap
Au Naturel Soap

So, what is it that makes people desire this soap?  It’s true that it won’t cure anything.  The goat’s milk is vitamin-rich, containing vitamins A & E, both excellent for the skin.  The oatmeal helps soothe skin.  The honey acts as a humectant in addition to the naturally occurring glycerin, drawing moisture from the air to the skin.  There is no added fragrance in this soap, and it has a lovely natural toasted oatmeal scent that comes out as the soap saponifies.  If I had to sum up what, exactly, makes this soap so skin-friendly, I’d say its nakedness makes it shine.

Because very little I experience in my life as a professional soapmaker and vendor surprises me, having people tell me last year that they needed soap that’s even more naked than Au Naturel about knocked me off my feet.  I learned that some people are very sensitive to oats and can’t use products containing them.  Yet, they wanted an incredible goat’s milk-based soap without fragrance or oatmeal.  For those people, I whipped up this little gem in January.

Nude Beach soap
Nude Beach

To call this a Castille soap would be a misnomer, though its only oil is olive oil, so it has the gentleness of Castille soap.  It contains goat’s milk, with all its rich moisturizing properties and vitamins.  It also has honey to lend its moisturization.  This little jewel is Nude Beach, an ultra-gentle soap that will make your skin feel spectacular.  Like Au Naturel, this one, also, is unscented.

So, which is it?  Do you want to go Au Naturel or take a detour to the Nude Beach?  Either way, both of these soaps will be kind to your skin, whether it’s young or old, particular or easy-going.