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Health & Beauty
Home > Health & Beauty > Topics:  Bath & Body
How to Make Your Own Shower Body Wash

Submitted by: Jeanne Roberts  12/22/2009 3:15 PM
 
Body wash, also known as shower gel or liquid soap, is a wonderful invention, from both a personal care and an environmental point of view.

Liquid soaps provide instant cleaning, as opposed to bar soaps, which can take from seconds to minutes to work up a lather good enough to make you feel like you're getting the job done.

This "instant" soap also means less time in the shower, and this is good for the environment, since water is becoming scarcer across the planet as climate change makes its presence felt.

Water Savings

In fact, using body wash allows you to cut back shower times for a full minute, saving from 2.5 to 7 gallons of water, depending on your shower fixture (standard or low-flow). In a year, this can save up to 2,555 gallons, or the equivalent of washing one load of clothing per week for a year.

This is also nearly the entire yearly water ration of a person living in Kenya, and almost twice as much water as is available to other third-world residents living in Angola, Zaire and Albania.

Free of Toxic Ingredients

Unfortunately, most commercial body washes are also laden with chemicals that are bad for the environment, and equally as bad for people, because they don't require FDA approval before reaching your bathroom, and only 11 percent of the more than 10,000 ingredients used have been tested by manufacturers for their possible adverse health effects.

The list of toxic ingredients is virtually endless, but includes such items as phthalates (from petroleum, which cause obesity, cancer and reproductive defects in males) and formaldehyde (used to preserve bodies), which is at best an allergen and at worst a carcinogen.

You can remove these threats to yourself and your environment by making your own body wash, and the process can be as simple or complex as time allows. Just remember your basic chemistry; oil and water don't mix.

Body Wash Recipe

The simplest recipe involves Ultra Ivory Pure dishwashing soap (the clear kind, and the only affordable liquid soap available in stores with no coloring, dyes, fragrance or surfactants).

Diluted about four to one with mineral water (depending on your preference and the amount of dirt and body oils you want to remove), it makes a remarkably effective body wash that leaves skin feeling both clean and soft, but you can add more softening properties by dissolving one-quarter cup of Epsom Salts in the mineral water and adding this to one gallon of the soap mixture.

Why salt? Because salt, and not oil, is what truly hydrates skin. Salt is hygroscopic; that is, it absorbs moisture from the air, and skin, with the right amount of salt, absorbs moisture more readily. This is why, when you sweat a lot, your skin looks clearer and firmer.

Adding Fragrances

If you must, you can also add fragrance, but please do not use essential oils. Instead, go to your nearest whole foods or herbal store and buy dried leaves, of lavender, bergamot, geranium, rosemary or mint, or grow you own and dry over winter. You can also use pure extracts, of vanilla or almond, for example (though just a few drops, because the alcohol-based carrier is very dry), or you can save orange or lemon peels, or rose petals from your favorite, fragrant roses.

Some people pulverize the herbs in a coffee grinder and add them to the soap mix. I prefer to steep them, over low heat and with very little distilled water, for 24 hours, and then drain them through cheesecloth or an old t-shirt. Add one teaspoon of rubbing alcohol for a carrier, and add the result to the soap mix. Because the fragrances are water-based and toxin-free, you can use as much or as little as you want.

The recipe also works for shampoo, leaving hair silky soft and manageable, and you are not limited in your choice of fragrances or additives from the natural world. Creeping oxalis, a reddish-leaved plant that looks like clover, is a wonderful astringent and skin tonic. Rose mallow will help skin irritations, and lovage – which was believed in ancient times to remove freckles and dark spots caused by aging – will, in fact, reduce the appearance of liver spots and firm older skin, though no claim can be made for freckles.

In fact, once you've perfected your body-wash manufacturing skills, you might want to get a book on herbal cures and experiment for yourself. If you come up with anything really good, please let us know by submitting a comment below.
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Comments:
 
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Is it 4 parts soap to 1 part mineral water or the reverse??
 
Posted by Georgia on December 26, 2009 8:26 PM
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I was also wondering what the ratio was; 1:4 ??? water:soap????
 
Posted by anonymous on December 27, 2009 9:49 PM
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In making the body soap, why do you suggest not using essential oils.
 
Posted by Carolyn Walker on December 28, 2009 5:05 PM
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why does the author avoid adding essential oils to the body wash? Is there a health reason or is it just individual perference?
 
Posted by anonymous on December 28, 2009 5:51 PM
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pls ask the author to respond to the first 4 postings. I'm including me email
 
Posted by Jules on December 31, 2009 2:35 AM
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I wouldn't do this. Dish soap, even if it seems to work well dries out the skin. Drying can cause your skin to age quicker.
 
Posted by Dani on January 15, 2010 11:25 AM
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I understand that it's not as cost-effective as dish soap, but I would spring for Dr. Bronner's. It's easy on the skin, it's already scented, and it's potent enough that you can really stretch a bottle out.
 
Posted by Elliot on March 19, 2010 7:14 PM
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Mineral oil is not a good ingredient for homemade products. It creates a barrier to the skin, and the skin needs to breathe. Also, the Ivory soap is processed. The Dr. Bronner's is a better choice (like Elliot stated).
 
Posted by Susan on April 01, 2010 5:11 PM
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It says Mineral Water--not Mineral Oil.
Essential oils are highly concentrated equal to pharmaceuticals (check out what Susun Weed says about EOs).
 
Posted by PersistentLilD on September 26, 2011 10:34 AM
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Dish soap is just as bad as bodywash, all soaps have lye in it which is a chemical that is harmful.
 
Posted by Latoria on December 07, 2012 5:59 PM
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