For household use and workshop
- Mild inexpensive hand soap made from organic vegetable oils
- Without any colourings, fragrances, fillers, complexing agents or optical brighteners
- Lasts for a long time
- Fragrance-free and vegan
Special product feature:
This curd soap is manufactured without using fillers, dyestuffs, fragrances, optical brighteners, and, above all, without any petrochemical complexing agents such as EDTA. It is thoroughly matured before being put on sale which increases its shelf life.
The slightly brown colouration of curd soap when stored for several years is a sign of the purely natural quality of this product and, in no way, impairs its quality and washing performance.
Sodium palmate, sodium cocoate, glycerine, sodium chloride, sodium thiosulfate certified organically grown
Product declaration:
- Soap from palm oil, certified organically grown >30%
- Soap from coconut oil, certified organically grown 15–30%
- Glycerine, certified organically grown <1% data-preserve-html-node="true"
- Salt <1% data-preserve-html-node="true"
- Sodium thiosulphate <1% data-preserve-html-node="true"
Origin and properties of the ingredients:
Soap being an active washing substance, it is obtained by simply boiling fats with an alkaline solution. Every fatty base differs in its washing properties somewhat from another because of their diversity of origin. Coconut-oil soap, e.g., possess a very good cleaning performance, even in cold and hard water; and soap made from palm oil contributes the required firmness to the soap which prevents it from quickly becoming soggy when the soap happens to be left on a wet surface for a longer period of time.
- Ecogarantie
- CSE (Certified Sustainable Economics)
- Vegan Society
Packaging:
- Folding box: >70% recycling material
- Outer carton: 100% recycling material
Biodegradability:
Soap is the only active washing substance which right after its use loses its surfactant properties under direct reaction with limescale which is always present in wastewater, thus becoming non-toxic to live aquatic organisms (primary degradation). The calcium soap (formed by the reaction) is then 100% micro-organically decomposed into carbon dioxide and water (secondary degradation).