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🌍 Clean with a Conscience!
Dr. Bronner's Pure-Castile Liquid Soap - Baby Unscented is a versatile, eco-friendly soap made with over 70% organic and fair trade ingredients. This concentrated formula allows for multiple uses while being gentle on the skin and packaged in 100% recycled materials, making it a responsible choice for both you and the planet.
Manufacturer | Dr. Bronner's |
Item model number | MR17-J772 |
Product Dimensions | 1 x 1 x 1.27 cm; 7.26 kg |
ASIN | B00KR1FWRS |
M**.
Excellent produit
Très satisfaite
A**
Great Quality Product!
This is a great wonderful product, that agrees with sensitive skin. It makes a good lather and does not have a strong smell. It lasts me a long time! I highly recommend it!
S**Y
Best truly unscented soap for sensitive skin and allergies
I've tried dozens of soaps over the years and this by far the best for me. I am allergic to fragrances. So many "unscented" or "fragrance free" are scented! I've been using this soap for at least a decade. I travel all over the world with it. It is the ONLY soap that I use. I cut it with about 40% water to make it last longer and be gentler on the skin. I use it for hand soap, face soap, and shower/body soap. The bar version of this soap is good too, but I find it doesn't last long enough for the price. Helpful tip: it works perfectly well in a foaming soap dispenser, which makes it much easier to use.
A**R
Excellent
Very good 😊
B**.
Changed my cleaning habits. Never going back.
Dr. Bronners is amazing stuff. One bottle of this will last you months. (Maybe weeks if you have an exceptionally large family of cleaning freaks).When I started down this path, I only used it for refilling my hand soap containers. I dilute it at about 10 parts water 1 part soap - it makes for a very liquidy soap, perfect for the foaming containers which I have since confiscated from friends who still *gasp* buy new things of soap when one goes empty. Before I had the fancy shmancy foaming pumps, I just used the normal soap pumps. It worked fine, but it was runny which took a bit of time to get used to.But because it is so diluted and still cleans very well, I had a crazy amount of soap on my hands. So I started using it to clean other stuff. Dish detergent was the next thing on the list - I dilute it maybe a touch less than the hand soap (maybe 8 parts water to 1 part soap) and it works equally as well as the name brand dish soap that I used to buy. Only a few times have I felt the need to let things soak a bit longer than I would have otherwise, but even then I tended to soak overnight, so no real change. If you're as crazy as I am, you can add some citrus essential oil to it to help with the degreasing aspects. Just 20 drops or so. It's not necessary though - just gives it a nice scent and I like to think it helps things along a bit. I probably do this about half the time.Still so much soap left and, well, I ran out of some all purpose spray. Made my own with a bit of Dr. Bronners to a 50/50 mix of water & vinegar. Works AMAZING. I now use Dr. Bronners for just about any cleaning that requires soap. If it's a tough job, I don't dilute it as much. If it's a light job, I dilute it a bit more. If it's something that won't be rinsed (all purpose spray), I dilute it significantly. (Tip on stuff that isn't going to be rinsed, use distilled water if you have really hard water. Otherwise you might feel a bit of film. I just boil some in my electric kettle and let it cool. Works fine.)Infinitely cheaper, over all, than the stuff you buy in the store. And, bonus: not as many chemicals. I'm not anti chemicals or store bought cleaners, but I've come to the conclusion that they don't work significantly better (if at all), they're more expensive, and they're not any more convenient. It takes all of a minute to fill an old spray/pump/squirt bottle with water, add some Bronners, maybe add some fragrance, and move on. One bottle to do almost all. Never going back.If you've never used Bronner's in this way, you can easily find loads of tips & suggestions on the Google. Lisa Bronner even has a blog and has posted a chart with dilution rates. And dilution isn't an exact science. You don't have to measure it all out. I just eyeball it.
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