Oats N Honey Tallow Soap
Oats N Honey Tallow Soap
Oats contain a compound called saponins that remove dirt and oil that clogs the skin, making them naturally cleansing. The oats throughout the bar also provide a gentle exfoliation and soothes dry itchy skin. Honey is a natural humectant, nourishing and hydrating the skin. Honey is also naturally antimicrobial and fights bacteria buildup. Both of these ingredients combined with grass-fed tallow create a creamy, nourishing soap.
Great care goes into this cold-process soap, beginning with home-rendered tallow from a local regenerative agriculture farm where the cows live happy lives and are 100% grass-fed. Tallow is the oil of “the days of old”. Not only is it resourceful to use rendered fat, but it’s extremely nourishing to the skin. The tallow makes this soap long-lasting as well as moisturizing.
This is soap like grandma used to make: plain and simple, no frills or cancerous chemicals. A sustainable and nourishing alternative to the many vegetable-oil laden soaps today.
Free of toxic chemicals, synthetic fragrance and dyes.
Size: Rustically hand cut into approximately 3.5 oz - 4 oz bars
Ingredients: 100% grass-fed local beef tallow, filtered water, organic extra-virgin olive oil, organic virgin coconut oil, sodium hydroxide*, organic oats, local raw honey
*Each batch is fully saponified, cured, and PH tested. There is no lye left in the final product.
Scent: No added fragrance— smells like fresh, good ole fashioned soap with a hint of oats!
These soaps are natural, homemade, and handcut so slight variations between bars may be present, and are celebrated!
Listing is for 1 bar
Important information:
Not for internal use
Always do your own research and talk to your medical health professional before introducing any new herbs into your daily routine. Be aware of any allergies you may have and herbal interactions with medications you may take.
These products and statements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to cure, treat, diagnose, or prevent any disease.