When my youngest son Rowan glided (his transition was a walk in the park!) into his teenager years, aside from the legs that just seemed to never intend to stop growing and an appetite of jaw dropping proportions, his battle with acne was the most traumatic. As his face, neck and back went from 'to be expected' to 'bad' and 'worse', we progressed from doctor's appointments to 'acne' and visits to a skin specialist. Over the ensuing years, so the soap ingredients started to change. This soap recipe originally started out with olive, coconut and palm oils and was a plain white soap. In conjunction with the medication that Rowan was taking, on advice from the skin specialist, the recipe was loaded with moisturising oils and even butters (who would of thought!) at various stages of the medical treatment.
Today, the three boys are all grown men, and although their skins are past the 'tea tree oil for problem skin' stage, the clean medicinal scent has grown on the whole family.
Greetings from Cape Town, South Africa!
I like tea tree oil, too--I think it smells clean. Your soap is gorgeous, made especially beautiful by all the "waste not bits!"
ReplyDeleteThanks Amy.
ReplyDeletexx
and I love the warm, earthy colors, tea tree EO is still for me to try out.
ReplyDeleteXX Carol
Carol, maybe it is time for me to start making soap with vibrant colours.
DeleteI've never tried tea tree eo in a soap. But I like the scent very much. Your soap looks good. I like the "waste not bits". They add structure to the soap.
ReplyDeletePetra
Petra, the 'waste not bits' was my son's artistic version of a tree. He was very disappointed that it did not come out as he thought it would! :)
DeleteSounds lovely, tea tree on it's own is the one scent that doesn't do well for our markets. I think a blend would be great though. I'm allergic to Tea Tree oil so it's the one EO I try not to use.
ReplyDeleteMichelle
I can assure you Michelle it took me a very long time to become accustomed to, let alone liking the scent. Fascinating how the markets work - here in Cape Town my Tea Tree has a reasonable following, yet in Johannesburg which is 1700km north from me it doesn't do as well.
Deletexx
Cynthia-Rose,
ReplyDeleteOh know different markets have different tastes all together. What one market doesn't like another one does. It's enough to drive one nuts, thinking of a Tea Tree/Eucalyptus combo might be nice.
Michelle
With havin so much content do you ever run into
ReplyDeleteany issues of plagorism or copyright infringement? My site
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