Essence of Eden
"Easter Egg Surprise" Soap: Limited Edition Fun for Kids!
"Easter Egg Surprise" Soap: Limited Edition Fun for Kids!
Experience the magic of Easter with our delightful Easter Egg Surprise Soap! 🐣
Crafted with love and creativity, each egg-shaped soap contains a special surprise hidden within, adding an element of excitement to bath time. Please note that supervision is required for children under 3 years old to avoid any choking hazards from the small toy inside.
Designed with kids in mind, our fun soaps are not only visually appealing but also gentle on their delicate skin. Made from 100% natural ingredients, including skin-nourishing olive oil, lathering coconut oil, and bubble-making castor oil, this soap ensures a natural and soothing cleansing experience from head to toe.
Enhance your child's bath routine with the calming scents of therapeutic-grade Lavender and refreshing Peppermint essential oils. Lavender provides a sense of relaxation, while Peppermint delivers a cooling sensation, making bath time a truly enjoyable experience for your little one.
Treat your child to a unique and memorable Easter surprise with our Easter Egg Soap. Order now and make bath time extra special this Easter season! 🌸🐰
Customers' common questions
Why are handmade soaps better for you than store bought soap?
Most store bought soaps are not actually soap at all. They are laden with detergents, cleaning agents, chemicals and fragrances that dehydrate and irritate your skin. Your skin is the largest organ of your body and absorbs these chemicals. It should be nourished and protected from un-natural chemical agents and that is the benefit of 100% natural handmade soaps.
Why are handmade natural soaps more expensive than store brands?
Because store brands are mass produced using cheap synthetic detergents and chemicals. Handmade soaps that are 100% natural use natural skin loving oils such as olive oil, coconut oil, tallow, mineral oils, essential oils and clays. They have a cure time of 4-6 weeks and are very time consuming to make, mold, un-mold, cut, wrap, and market. Each bar is unique in appearance and it's own little work of art.
What about the lye used in soap making? Doesn't lye make soap caustic?
Lye used in soapmaking comes in two forms, sodium hydroxide (derived from hard wood ash) is used for solid soaps and potassium hydroxide (derived from potash) for liquid soaps. They are both extremely caustic in soapmaking and extreme measures have to be taken in handling the lye and the soap for the first 24-48 hours of the process. The soaps go through an incubation period where the soap heats up, gels and becomes solid when the oils have used up all of the lye for saponification. The lye saponifies the oils and that's what makes them lathery soap. No lye, no soap!