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Balsam Swirl Bar Soap
Certified Organic Soap
Item #:
0810020
Availability: Yes Usually ships In 3-4 Business Days
Reg. Retail: $3.99
Price: $3.25
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Certified organic soap. USDA approved. Each bar of this 100% certified organic soap is carefully handcrafted in small batches by the Vermont Soap Company using a special 200-year-old process that takes nearly a month. Super mild, each is made from a hypoallergenic vegetable base of organic coconut, palm, olive and palm kernel oils with only natural, aromatherapy essential oils and botanical extracts. All bars are facial quality. Free of artificial colors, fragrances or preservatives. No animal products (except honey soap, which has bee's honey!), animal by-products or animal testing. Choose from 16 different Vermont Soap Organics blends for different skin types.
How to choose the right organic soap for you.
Handcrafted in Vermont.
The New England Trading Company - Made in New England Home Page
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What is natural?
Many products on the market today claim to be "natural." But what makes a product natural? Most people have a common-sense definition of what "natural" is or should be. For example, natural to most people means being able to pronounce all the ingredients and not needing a chemistry textbook to understand them. The definition of "Natural" is important. It sets apart socially responsible companies from the rest. Synthetic ingredients can be toxic, and usually cost less than natural ingredients giving the mass-marketed multinational corporations a competitive advantage.
Can any product claim to be natural?
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is the watchdog for bogus environmental claims. The FTC's guidance does not address "natural" marketing claims specifically. However, the guidance includes a section on general environmental benefit claims that states, "every express and material implied claim that the general assertion conveys to reasonable consumers about an objective quality, feature or attribute of a product or service must be substantiated." With so many products on the market claiming to be natural and so few government resources to enforce bogus claims, it is up to consumers to identify what is truly natural. Consumers should carefully read product labels including ingredient lists and then vote for their definition of natural with their buying power!
Are synthetics and chemical ingredients safe?
Some ingredients in mass-marketed soap including Isopropyl Alcohol, DEA, artificial fragrances, FD&C Colors, Propylene Glycol and Triclosan, have been proven harmful to human health and can cause severe skin irritation in some people. These ingredients are not natural. Some companies will include a trace of truly natural ingredients in a product with some of the synthetic ingredients above and claim the product is natural.
What does "Natural" mean with our Organic Soap?
It means no artificial colors and fragrances and no testing on animals. It means using Rosemary extract as a preservative, not a chemically-derived formula. Natural is about better choices and the responsibility inherent in those choices: organic before pesticides; botanicals before artificial colors and fragrances; vegetable-based before animal-based; and reusable before disposable. Natural is about big-picture thinking. It's about socially responsible business, looking at how we source, formulate and package and reuse or safely dispose of what's left. It's about the relationship between producer and consumer and the planet that we share. Natural cannot be codified like the ten commandments. It is about staying as close to the original form as possible. Natural is about developing an integrated long-term view of everything that we do.
Why we label our products chemical/synthetic-free?
Our organic soap products are safe and nontoxic, readily biodegradable, and made as close to original form as possible; that it is free of artificial colors (no FD&C or Lake Colors are used), artificial fragrances (essential oils used instead) or preservatives (we use a high quality rosemary extract - never any EDTA, triclosan, benzoin, parabens, etc.), detergents, alcohol's, propylene glycol, etc. We recognize that in the absence of a generally recognized definition of synthetic in personal care, our claim is essentially puffery. One proposed working definition of synthetic (as pertaining to personal care products) is, "a product that cannot be produced in an ordinary American kitchen using generally available utensils". Handmade bar soaps, castile liquid soap products, essential oils, liquid aloe, rosemary extract, alkali - all of these natural products fit this sensible working definition.
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