Today's Clothing - for the woman who does not want cookie cutter clothes

For the woman who does not want cookie cutter clothing

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Baudelaire - made in France

MADE IN FRANCE

 
 

FINE SOAP MAKERS, LIKE THE REST OF US, CHOOSE FATS WISELY

Most of today's talk about fat concerns the foods we eat. But did you know that when you choose a soap, you also have a choice of saturated, unsaturated, poly, mono, animal and vegetable fats? Soap is made by mixing a fat with an alkali, a process called saponification. In the old days, soap makers used the actual ashes of plants like the soapwort and now-extinct barilla for their alkali. Then, in 18th century France, Nicolas Leblanc figured out how to synthesize the active ingredient of this ash, sodium hydroxide (lye), and it has been used for soap making ever since. When it comes to which fat and other ingredients to use, however, there are still plenty of options. Most commercial soaps are made from a tallow base, which is, simply, animal fat. Tallow has been used for soap ever since the Phoenicians boiled up some goat fat with wood ashes about 2500 years ago (the first solid soap bar wasn't made until around the eighth century). Superfatted soaps are made by adding additional oil or fat (often lanolin) to the base after saponification. Glycerin soaps are a natural by-product of the soap making process. When you mix fat with lye, the reaction creates about 93 percent soap and seven percent glycerin. Glycerin soap is made by adding back to the soap the glycerin naturally removed in the saponification process. Many of Europe's master soap makers (called savonniers in France) prefer vegetable based soaps, which are usually made with a blend of 80 percent palm oil and 20 percent coconut oil (just like some cookies!). They also often use other vegetable oils, such as the olive oil which is used to make the famous "Castile soap" of Spain. Vegetable based soaps have been coveted for centuries for their aesthetic qualities and the way they pamper the skin. Today, some people simply like them because they prefer products not derived from animals. Vegetable soaps can be blended with fine fragrances to make them more luxurious, and triple-milled to provide long-lasting qualities. This is the case with Provence Santé soaps, made by master "savonnier" Stephane Lecaille in Avignon in the south of France. Lecaille crafts his soap using traditional methods and natural additives such as lavender, the classic fragrance of Provence; extract of honeysuckle, which soothes the skin; and vervain (also known as lemon verbena), which lends a sweet, citrus fragrance to the soap. Provence Santé vegetable based soaps are imported by Baudelaire, Inc., which specializes in fine imported soaps and body care products.

 

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