Essence of Eden
Experience the rejuvenating power of nature with our Oceana Breeze soap. Crafted with care, this luxurious bar boasts a refreshing blend of lime, lavender, and spearmint essential oils, reminiscent of a crisp ocean breeze. The addition of pink Himalayan sea salt provides gentle exfoliation, leaving your skin feeling invigorated and renewed.
Indulge in a sensory escape as you lather up with this revitalizing soap. Whether you're starting your day with an energizing shower or unwinding after a long day, our Oceana Breeze soap promises to uplift your spirits and refresh your senses.
Each bar is meticulously handcrafted with all-natural ingredients, including coconut oil, olive oil, and lime juice, ensuring a nourishing cleanse that leaves your skin feeling soft, smooth, and delicately scented. Dive into the blissful experience of our Oceana Breeze soap and let the revitalizing aroma transport you to the tranquil shores of paradise.
Ingredients: Coconut Oil, Olive Oil, Aqua, Lime Juice, Sodium Hydroxide (Lye), Pink Himalayan Sea Salt, Cane Sugar, Lime, Lavender, and Spearmint Essential Oils, Spirulina Powder.
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!