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The best way is to pour the salts into the bath under the running water and once ready, stir around with your hand (being careful of the temperature!) to make sure the salts have dissolved.
Some of the bath products have Kaolin Clay in them… some clays are coloured and leave a fine residue of powered after the bath has been drained.
Due to the nature of some of the ingredients in our bath products, there may, sometimes, be a ring around the bath after draining. The best way to deal with this is to rinse the bath out using the shower head right away when the bath is still warm. I usually do it immediately after getting out and rub a cloth or spine around the sides.
Evidence has been found that ancient Babylonians understood soap making as early as 2800 BC Archeologists have found soap-like material in historic clay cylinders from this time. These cylinders were inscribed with what we understand as saying, “fats boiled with ashes” (a method of making soap).
Saponification is the chemical reaction between oils or fats and an alkali, such as sodium hydroxide or lye. This process transforms these ingredients into soap and glycerin.
SAPO! The word sapo, Latin for soap, likely was borrowed from an early Germanic language and is cognate with Latin sebum, "tallow". It first appears in Pliny the Elder's account, Historia Naturalis, which discusses the manufacture of soap from tallow and ashes.
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