Product Details
This fabulous lavender scented, lavender colored, aromatic soap, is almost too pretty to use. If you are a fan of lavender you will appreciate this beautifully lavender scented, all vegetable, cruelty-free, all natural "glycerin creme" soap.
Sappo Hill soaps are very special for a lot of different reasons. This Oregon based company uses a traditional soap making kettle process that
painstakingly and carefully blends saponified palm and coconut oils for their rich, skin moisturizing glycerin. An emollient used to hold moisture,
glycerin contains humectant properties. It is also a mild emulsifier. All fats used for the soaps are obtained from the fruit or seed of the palm tree
or kernels of coconut. This guarantees a good lather that gently cleanses the skin.
Each cake of soap is carefully wire-cut, air-dried and aged to create a long-lasting soap for exceptional mildness. As you can imagine, this
small-batch, time consuming soap making process is no longer used by American soap makers.
Sappo Hill, unlike other soap manufacturers, retains all of the glycerin that is naturally produced during the soap making process. Believe it or
not, most soap manufacturers remove the glycerin created during the soap making process. What do they do with the glycerin? They sell it to the
chemical industry. Not Sappo Hill. They recognize the fact that glycerin is a natural skin softener that is vital to the soap's longevity. Glycerin
prevents soap from dissolving too quickly in any type of water.
Sappo Hill never ever uses any ingredients that originated from animals. Also, animals are never used in any testing process. The lavender scented,
lavender colored soap is wrapped in environmentally friendly packaging. It does not contain plastic or cardboard wrapping that will overburden the
earth.
Sappo Hill soaps make wonderful gifts. I used to keep the Oatmeal Cookie version in my guest bathroom at home but my guests kept swiping it.
Sometimes they would ask if they could take it home with them. Of course I had to let them. I learned about these wondrous soaps. Now I either give
the soaps in sets of three or six as gifts or I keep them for long luxurious baths. |