Friday, March 18, 2011

Gee, This Smells Like....

One of the best things about being an artisan soapmaker is the ability to customize. Because I have complete control over what goes into our products, it’s easy to tailor formulas for specific needs. Some people have sensitivities or allergies that make it difficult, if not impossible, to find soaps or bath products appropriate for their use. Can you imagine shopping for personal care products if you have a sensitivity to coconut, for example?  Nearly every cleansing product contains coconut oil in some form.  We love coconut oil, but we can make products without it. It’s very gratifying to be able to help people by developing a product that they like and can use.

It's not news to those with a sensitivity to fragrances that an unscented product is not necessarily fragrance free.  If a product is labeled as "unscented" it simply means that there is no detectable scent.  Usually, fragrances are added to those types of products to mask the actual scent of the ingredients used to make it.  How frustrating for a fragrance-sensitive person to break out in a rash from an "unscented" product!  All of our products are available absolutely 100% fragrance free.

I have to admit, though, I really enjoy customizing fragrances for customers!  Woodhaven Soaps can find fragrance oils that smell like just about any popular or high-end (read "expensive") trademarked fragrance available today. A fragrance that is reminiscent of a trademarked fragrance is called a "type." As an example, our Moonlight fragrance smells similar to Moonlight Path® by Bath and Body Works, LLC, so we refer to it as a Moonlight Path® "type." Note that Moonlight Path® is a registered trademark of Bath and Body Works, LLC. Woodhaven Soaps is not affiliated with Bath and Body Works, LLC. We do not claim that our fragrance IS their Moonlight Path®, rather that our Moonlight is the same type of fragrance.  We can even sometimes find fragrance types for those that have been discontinued. How neat is that?!

Currently, Woodhaven Soaps has 16 fragrance types in our web store, and many more in stock.  Take a look at our products at http://www.woodhavensoaps.com/.  If your favorite isn't represented there, just drop us a note at customerservice@woodhavensoaps.com, or phone us at (402) 690-6156, and let us know what you'd like.  We'll tell you if we have it in stock or can get it for you, and we guarantee a much better price than the name-brand version!

Until next time, I'm off to a glass of wine, a good book, and a Moonlight bath!

Is This "All Natural?" GOOD QUESTION!

One of the hottest topics among soap makers is the term "natural."  How often do we see that word on a product?  All natural this, and all natural that.  Our minds naturally go to a good place when we see the word natural.  We automatically assume that something that is natural is better than something that is not.  What does the word actually mean? 
 
I have a dozen eggs in my refrigerator right now that proudly proclaim themselves "All Natural" on the carton.  Great.  But what is an UNnatural egg?  If natural means something in it's original state as found in nature, then arsenic, lead, and petroleum are natural.  Products containing essential oils are labeled often as all natural.  We consider essential oils to be natural, but they are made by people distilling lots of plant material and then disbursing the distillation in oil.  Are they really natural?  Fragrance oils are considered synthetic, but if a fragrance oil is made from diluted essential oils fixed with petroleum derivatives, are they as natural as essential oils?  The oxides so many of us use for coloring our products are by and large made in a laboratory, as natural oxides mined from the earth are contaminated with lead, mercury, and other nasty natural things. The lab-produced oxides are virtually chemically identical to the natural oxides; does that make them a natural colorant?  Shea butter; we all love shea butter and consider it a natural moisturizer.  It's pure lovely fat from a plant source.  But people have to extract that fat, and to actually BE pure, it has to be cleaned and filtered.  Is it natural?  And so the discussion remains circular, and the word natural has become more or less a marketing ploy.


In the United States, the regulatory bodies have pretty much ignored the word natural, not trying to define it or make rules for its use.  That doesn't surprise me at all.  I'd hate to be the one who had to decide what natural means.  Oh...wait a minute....I DO have to decide!  At least for Woodhaven Soaps, I have to decide. 


I fussed and fussed with whether to use the word at all in conjunction with any Woodhaven Soaps products.  In the end,  I (arbitrarily) decided that since the majority of people divide fragrances into two categories -- essential oils (natural) and fragrance oils (synthetic), we will use the term here at Woodhaven to describe any of our products that contain essential oils as their fragrance (or no fragrance at all) and contain NO coloring agents.  Under those guidelines, I don't have to decide which coloring agents fall into the natural/synthetic categories.  In the end, it's up to you.  The one thing I DO know for sure is that we work hard to produce great soaps and great bath and body products.  Loving our work here at Woodhaven Soaps comes naturally to us!

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

The End of the Beginning

This month we celebrate six months being officially in business.  It's been quite a ride so far.  We had our last craft fair for the season this past weekend.  I purposely did not book any shows for December so we could keep up with holiday orders without (completely) losing our sanity and our cheerful holiday dispositions. 

When we began Woodhaven Soaps, I knew there'd be some surprises along the way.  Things are never quite the way you expect or envision them to be.  So I'm surprised that the biggest surprise is that there weren't more surprises.  I knew I'd enjoy visiting with people and helping customers...no surprises there, other than I love it even more than I thought I would.  I figured I'd like doing shows and fairs, and I did.  OK...maybe I was surprised that I was able to get up at an ungodly early hour to prepare for shows (to say I'm not a morning person is an understatement.  OK, family, control yourselves.  Your laughter is hurting my ear drums.).  I expected I wouldn't necessarily love doing paperwork, and I don't, but somehow it gets done, mostly, more or less, usually. 

I was a bit worried about keeping up my energy level once the newness of being in business had worn off.  After all, I'm no spring chicken (I hate that phrase but, sadly, it fits).  But another surprise...every encounter or conversation I have had with you wonderful people out there is so invigorating!  It's easy to become cynical about the state of the human race just watching the news on TV every night.  Getting out there and communicating one-on-one has certainly reassured me that the percentage of the human population falling into the nuts-and-kooks category is pretty darn small.  I thank you all for renewing my spirit!

At this time of year we can't help reflecting on beginnings and endings, the sad and the sweet.  So here we are, at the end of the beginning of Woodhaven Soaps.  Just like everyone else, we've had our ups and down this past year, but the blessings each and every one of you have brought to our lives is a treasure, and we thank you.  We look forward to the coming year, with all its surprises in store.

Wishing all of you a happy and blessed Holiday season!  Let us all give joy to another person and recognize the joy they bring to us.

http://www.woodhavensoaps.com

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Why Do I Bother?

As an artisan soapmaker, every once in a while someone will ask me why I bother to make soap when the grocery aisles are full of it.  It's a good question, and it deserves a good answer.  Why do I bother?

As a family, we have the usual assortment of skin problems...one family member as eczema, one rosacea, and so on.  Over the years we've purchased and used just about every product out there, and they all caused or exacerbated the "dry itchies."  We have three grown sons, and when our granddaughters came along, the dangers of parabens had just hit the news.  Alarmed, we began to really study exactly what was in the stuff we were using.  The more we read, the more confused we became.  "All chemicals are bad!" said one, and "All chemicals are good!" said another.  Common sense suggested to us that since the skin is the largest organ in the body, maybe it wasn't such a good idea to expose it to chemicals and detergents on a daily basis.  We needed to search out some alternatives.

As we looked for new products, we turned to ones with the fewest ingredients; ingredients with names we could recognize and pronounce.  At our local health food store, we purchased a bar of "true" soap...basic saponified oils, rather pricey compared to that grocery aisle.  Didn't think much about it, until a couple of weeks later when it dawned on me that none of us had complained of the "dry itchies" in a number of days!  Hmmmmm....maybe we were on to something.  I continued to purchase and use the good old plain "healthy" soap, and we continued to improve.  My curiosity began to build.  How exactly did they make this soap?  I pictured the old iron pot over an open fire in the yard and leaching out lye from wood ashes.  I read every book on soapmaking I could find, and was pleasantly surprised to discover soapmaking had made it into the 21st century.  After a couple of months of research and study, I began to feel the pressing need to try this soapmaking thing myself!  The rest, as they say, is history.  I found my inner science geek and became addicted to soapmaking in short order.  So much to try; so much to learn.  If I used olive oil, for example, would the soap be milder?  What about coconut oil; drying?  Necessary for big bubbles?  I learned the properties of different oils and butters, how to handle what potentially could be a danger -- sodium hydroxide (lye).  How to make the bar of soap nice and hard without sacrificing mildness and lathering qualities.  Then there were the fragrances...oh!  The fragrances!  And the best discovery was that I could produce wonderful soap for a lot less than we had been spending purchasing it.  We soon had literally hundreds of bars of soap lined up on the shelves.  Family and friends were supplied with soap for the next several years, yet I could not stop making soap.  Guess there was only one thing to do....OPEN A BUSINESS!!  Share this wonderful discovery with others!  Voila....Woodhaven Soaps was born.

Why handcrafted soap?  Well, most of the so-called soaps in the grocery aren't soaps at all.  They're detergents "disguised" as soap.  True soap, saponified vegetable oils and rich vegetable butters, contains somewhere around 25% glycerin, a natural byproduct of saponification and a humectant, drawing moisture to the skin.  Commercial producers take that stuff OUT of soap and sell it.  They can make a lot of money selling glycerin.  Our soaps are also superfatted, meaning we use less lye than necessary to make our soaps, leaving some of the skin-friendly oils and butters free in the soap to prevent it from being drying. 

Because our soaps are handmade by little-ole me, we have complete control over what goes into them.  We search out sustainable and ethically-sourced oils, make sure none are chemically processed, and formulate different soaps to serve different purposes.  Camping?  We make a soap for campers...one which hopefully won't attract the little beasties.  Shaving soap, shampoo bars, pet soap, baby soap....the list can be virtually endless!  Hundreds and hundreds of fragrances available to us.  We can and do choose to use phthalate-free fragrances (phthalates---subject of a future blog!).

We're a small operation.  We don't have a big factory producing waste.  As a matter of fact, we produce virtually no waste and no pollution.

Why use handcrafted artisan-made soaps when the grocery aisles are full of them?  Our question is...why would you use a synthetic detergent "soap" when you can get wonderful, skin loving REAL soap at an affordable price?  Let's see....no waste, no pollution, no preservatives, no phthalates, mild and kind to the skin, lathers like crazy, any fragrance we want, affordable...not to mention the wonderful feeling we get when a customer tells us they no longer stay awake nights scratching....guess that's why I bother!