Bramble Berry is an online shop that sells soap you can melt and then put into bars, provided you have a mold for them to go in. You can add smells to the soap, though it still smells despite that. They sell variety of soaps. Clear, white, aloe, oat meal, ect. I don't know if they have detergant or not. (I have my doubt there) Since my mother tried them out, we have prefered them since. We have our own favored smells to put in.
If you want to make your own bars, don't heat the soap up too hot, because too many bubbles will get into the soap, and you might make the mold leach slightly, damage the mold, and have a harder time removeing the soap. If you're not alergic to rubbing alcahol, which is found in the bandade section (quite handy), a tiny little spray bottle can be used to spray off the bubbles that remain when you plopp the soap into mold. Arts and craft stores probably sell a mold or two, as well as their own 'make it yourself' soaps.
Course you can just cutt it up into squares to. -.-
Anyway, I have no problem with body wash soap, but I need to have the squeezy ball to use it correctly. ...
The liquid hand wash, doesn't go into the squeezy ball things (those colorful things that look like balled up scrunchies, with a white rope loop handle), but the body wash does. They only need one little squirt, then to lather it into suds, and then rub that all over the body. If you put the body wash right on yourself, it's probably going to dry your skin faster, and you use alot more of it.
I am not going to argue the Nitrogena soap, because sometimes my body wants to break out zits more. They still need to sell bars, because some of us still use them anyway.
strapshoechris wrote:
Sadly, it seems the last provider of the type of cheap soap I like in my area seems to be Family Dollar stores.
Yeah, oh well. I have seen some dollar stores that were good. Others were sloppy.