Tag: All Natural

  • Four Weeks of Releases!

    Next week we are kicking off four exciting weeks of products releases! We have been working hard designing these amazing new products and we can’t wait to share them with all of you!

    Each Friday over the next four weeks a new product will be released and they will become available on our website and at the farmer’s markets and craft shows that we attend. Stay tuned for more details!!

    Schedule of Releases:

    Get more information on each product on it’s release date!

    • April 15th – Deep Space Goat Milk Soap
    • April 22nd – Beeswax Candles
    • April 29th – Goat Milk Lotion
    • May 6th – Final Gravity Stout Goat Milk Soap

    Website Sale!

    During the weekend of each release the newly released product will be on sale on our website! We want everyone to try our new products so we are offering 20% off Friday-Sunday.

    This sale is only available through the website. 

     

  • Using our Goat Milk Soap Laundry Detergent

    Have you had the opportunity to try our Goat Milk Soap Laundry Detergent yet?

    Goat Milk Soap Laundry Detergent from The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    Most people are very conscious of the products that they use on and put into their body. It’s time for us to think about the products we use on our clothing that sits against our skin all day. Our detergent is all natural. You simply use one tablespoon. That’s it! You don’t need any additional soaps or fabric softeners. It gets even the tough stains out and leaves your clothes feeling soft and smelling clean. Once you use it you will wonder why all laundry detergents aren’t this simple.

    Our Goat Milk Soap Laundry Detergent is safe to be used in both top loader and high efficiency machines. Our recipe has minimal sudsing, which is much better for your machine and clothes, and the ingredients are gentler on your machine and the environment!

    Find our Goat Milk Laundry Detergents Here

  • What’s the lather like?

    This is a question I receive frequently from new customers. People are often surprised, and maybe a little disappointed, when they use a handmade soap for the first time and find that the lather is not as robust as they are used to with their commercial bar. I will commonly have customers, who are looking to use our soap for the first time, ask what they can expect from our lather.

    Goat Milk Soap Lather

    I want to start off by saying that there is a good reason why handmade soaps often do not lather as strongly as their commercial counterparts. Commercial soaps frequently contain sulfates. Sulfates are used as a foaming agent that helps the soap to quickly develop a thick lather. There are countless articles out there that debate the use of sulfates, whether they are safe for you or the environment. Whether or not you believe that they are “safe” there is a decent amount of evidence that shows that sulfates can cause skin irritation.

    The important thing to remember is that the lather itself does not get your skin clean. We have been conditioned to believe that a thick lather is necessary for the soap to do it’s job… It’s not. So why include an ingredient that is not necessary and is potentially harmful?

    With that said, what about our lather? We understand that our customers want lather, so when we were developing our recipe we designed a mixture of oils that promotes a more robust lather than is often found in homemade soaps. We do this naturally just with the percentage of a few key oils within our soap.

    So, what’s our lather like? For most of our soap line it is full, silky, and bubbly. It gives you the experiences that you are looking for and leaves your skin feeling soft and clean. The lather of our Castile Goat Milk Soap and our Cedarwood Goat Milk Soap is more lotion-like. It’s slick and full, making it a perfect soap for shaving. Finally there is our Rosewood Salt Goat Milk Soap. The lather for this particular soap is a little thinner than the others, because of the salt, but it still bubbles up nicely.

    We put a lot of effort and research into naturally getting the perfect lather for our soaps. Give it a try! You won’t be disappointed!

  • Best Soaps for Children

    At nearly every farmer’s market and craft show that we have ever attended we have had someone ask us “What’s the best soap for …”. They want to know what soap is best for their unique situation. So, we have decided to create a series to help you pick the best soaps for your specific needs. What soaps is best for feet, or acne, or what about dry skin. Find the answers to all of these and many, many more over the course of the next year.

    We are going to start this series with the “soap need” people are most concerned about… Children. In general children have sensitive skin. Our daughter Bryce’s baby skin was incredibly sensitive. If for some reason her clothes were washed in a detergent that was not “free and clear” her whole body would break out in hives. For the longest time we would only use our Castile soap on her. When she started bathing with her brother she would show interest in using whichever soap variety he was using, so we began to test our other soaps on small areas of her skin. She never had a reaction to any of our soaps and has been able to use our entire soap line without any problems.

    Important things to remember: While the majority of our soap line is fine for sensitive skin, all soaps should be tested on a small area of skin before regular use. If your child should react to this soap (or any soap for that matter) you want the reaction to be contained to a small area and not all over the body. Also, our soaps are not tear-fee, no real soap can be tear-free. If you look at those tear-free baby soaps they are made up almost entirely of chemicals, making them soap free, and therefore tear-free. For me personally, I would rather deal with the soap in order to have a more natural option. Be sure to keep our soap out of your and your children’s eyes to avoid irritation.

    Castile Goat Milk Soap

    Our Castile is our most sensitive soap. It’s two main ingredients are olive oil and goat milk. It’s very gentle and can be used on even the most sensitive skin. Infants need very little soap, but if you are using one of our soaps on your baby this would be the soap to use.

    You can find our Castile Goat Milk Soap HERE

    Oatmeal Honey Goat Milk Soap

    Our Oatmeal Honey is another sensitive soap. The oatmeal and honey ingredients are said to calm irritated skin and are gentle on sensitive skin. This soap has ground oatmeal throughout, which acts as a light exfoliant. While this exfoliant is not as strong as others that are specifically designed to be “heavy exfoliants” it still should be used with caution on your youngest children. Any amount of exfoliant could potentially be irritating to very sensitive skin. While, we have never experienced an irritation with our sensitive skin child, it is still good to be on the cautious side.

    You can find our Oatmeal Honey Goat Milk Soap HERE

    Soaps to Avoid with Children

    Coffee: Our coffee is a heavy exfoliant which can be very irritating to children’s sensitive skin

    Rosewood Salt: Like with our coffee this soap is a heavy exfoliant and can cause irritation to sensitive skin.

  • Where you can find us this Winter…

    Now that most of our regular farmer’s markets are closed for the season and it’s a slow time for craft shows you might be wondering where you can pick up our goat milk soaps over the winter. While we may not be “everywhere” like we are from May through December, we are still very accessible through the Winter.

    You can still find us every Saturday at South of the James. It’s now the Winter Market and the hours have changed to 9am-12pm. There is a great group of vendors there throughout the winter, so it is well worth the trip!

    The West End Farm Markets, our other regular Saturday market through the Spring and Summer, has a pop up winter market on the second Saturday of each month. The market runs from 10am-12pm. We will be at each of the pop-up markets, provided it’s not raining. Tents are prohibited at the pop-up markets making it impossible for us to attend in inclement weather.

    Several stores throughout Virginia carry our soaps. Check out the “Where to Buy” section of our website to find all of the locations were our soap can be found!

  • Using our Goat Milk Soap as Shampoo – Revisited

    Two years ago I wrote a blog post about my experience using our goat milk soap as shampoo (You can find it here). The post gets incredible traffic, last year pulling in thousands of views. After spending several years using the soap I felt it was time to revisit this post and share some tips that I have learned from years of continued use.

    Using Goat Milk Soap as Shampoo from The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    In 2014, I set out to eliminate all commercial body care products from our household in order to reduce the chemicals that my family was being exposed to. That year we started to make our own deodorant, and used our handmade goat milk soap for everything possible, including washing our hands and bodies (of course), shaving, and shampoo. If you read the post from two years ago you will learn that I was quite skeptical about changing out my shampoo, but knew it was something that I needed to at least try.

    In all of this the important thing to remember is, like with most natural alternatives, it’s not going to act like and give you the same result as their commercial counterparts. There are pros and cons on both sides.

    The commercial soaps are often chemical based. They include chemicals that are specially designed to give your hair specific qualities, and in many cases they do as they are designed to do (pro). While these chemicals may be able to make your hair do what you want it to do, they could also be harmful to your health and to the environment (big con). For me, commercial soaps made my hair frizzy and my scalp dry and itchy, no matter what brand or specially product I used (con).

    Natural soaps, like our goat milk soap, are made with natural materials making them better for you and the environment (big pro), however they are not specifically designed to be used on hair (con). Because the soap does not strip your hair nearly as bad as the commercial brands do (at least in my experience), it makes your hair feel heavier (con), but hair tends to be a lot less greasy between washings (pro). For me, our goat milk soap made my hair feel stronger and less frizzy (pro). My waves continue to be more uniformed and less wild (pro) but my hair does not feel the same as it did with the commercial shampoos (con).

    With both the commercial shampoos and our goat milk soap I have to strip my hair at least once a month. While the build up on my hair and scalp with our soaps has been far less than it was with the commercial shampoos I still need to strip my hair with this vinegar and water mixture about once a month.

    When I started my experiment I was using our Castile soap because it was our most moisturizing bar and I was dealing with a very dry scalp and frizzy hair. I later found that this soap was too heavy to be used as a shampoo. Some of our customers, who have serious scalp issues, still swear by it, but for me it weighed my hair down too much. I have since started using our coffee goat milk soap or canine shampoo. The coffee goat milk soap’s PH is perfect for hair and the canine shampoo contains tea tree which is great for for dealing with dry itchy scalp.

    All in all I have had a good experience using our goat milk soap as shampoo. After years of use my hair feels stronger and more healthy.

  • What’s in Our Soap Dish – January

    Your skin’s needs change throughout the year and it may benefit you to use different soap varieties at different points of the year. We are here as soap makers to give you insight into what WE use each month and why! While we often take what we can get and our soap dish is usually filled with flawed soaps (dented, or underweight) that we can’t sell, if we get a choice the following are the soaps we love to use in January:

    Winter Goat Milk Soap

    I look forward to us having our Winter Goat Milk Soap in stock all year long. In 2014 we sold out in two weeks and I really didn’t have the opportunity to use it very much. In 2015 we made three times more of it than we had the year before. We released it on December 5th and sold more that day than we had in our whole 2014 stock! Now, a week into the new year, we only have a small supply left. This soap has a warm scent (ginger, cinnamon, clove, and dark molasses) and a beautiful (naturally occurring) red color. The ginger essential oil also gives the soap a slight warming effect during use!

    If you are interested in adding our Winter Goat Milk Soap to your January soap dish, you should order it soon! We are very close to selling out and won’t have it back in stock until the first week in December 2016.

    Find our Winter Goat Milk Soap Here

    Castile Goat Milk Soap

    Our Castile Goat Milk Soap serves different uses at different times of year. Castile serves as an excellent shave soap, which is less of a concern this time of year, however the Castile also has a very moisturizing lather. During the Winter, when our wood stove (or in most of our reader’s cases, central heat) is running full blast, our skin dries out. We use our Castile soap to keep our skin soft and hydrated during the dry Winter months.

    Find our Castile Goat Milk Soap Here

    Check back next month to see what’s in our soap dish in February! 

  • Are you following us?

    If you aren’t following us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter yet, you really should… and here is why:

    The Freckled Farm Soap Company - Goat Milk Soap

    Instagram:

    On Instagram we post daily (or close to it!) pictures from the farm. See pictures  of all of our animals, progress of the pregnancies (goat and pig), the births, the babies (goat, pig, and chick), farm chores, and progress in the garden and with homesteading projects. This year we will also be posting more farm, garden, and homesteading tips! Following us on Instagram also allows you to see peeks into our soap room and keep up with our current soap company projects.

    Facebook:

    We have two new Goat Milk Soaps currently in the works, as well as several new products! It’s going to be a big year. Be the first to know when we release a new soap or product. See updates of where we will be, and any new stores who are carrying our soaps. Follow us on Facebook to keep up with everything going on with The Freckled Farm Soap Company!

    Twitter:

    Do you just want quick updates about the soap company and farm? Follow us on twitter!

    The Blog:

    Finally, if you are not already subscribed to the blog now is the time to do so! We have a huge list of awesome blog posts planned for this year. Learn more  about our goat milk soap. Learn how we make it and see behind the scenes. Learn about the ingredients we use and why we choose them. Learn about what we are doing to make our products better for the environment. Learn about new products. Have you ever wondered which soap is best for your feet, or face, or maybe even your hair? What about which soap is best for exfoliating or sensitive skin? Find out this year!

  • Canine Shampoo Testimonial – Goat Milk Soap

    We absolutely love hearing from customers! Over the weekend we received a message from Sandy about her experience with our Canine Shampoo Goat Milk Soap:

    “We purchased a bar of your Canine Shampoo when we attended the Harvest festival at Monticello for our Jack Russell/Beagle rescue dog. Barkley had his first bath with it today.  All I can say is WOW!

    He smells great and his coat is so soft.  He appears to be shedding less and is not scratching his coat. His white coat is so bright.He loved being rubbed down with bar and we loved how easily it rinsed off.

    Thanks again for recommending it.  It is definitely Barkley approved.”

    Goat Milk Soap - Canine Shampoo - The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    If you are interested in trying our Canine Shampoo you can find it here.

  • Avoid chemicals with Goat Milk Soap

    We often have customers ask us what makes our goat milk soap different from the bars they get at the store. The answer they get is probably more than they asked for, but it’s something we’re passionate about. So here goes.

    Aside from the obvious difference that ours is Goat Milk Soap, what you typically find in stores in the form of a bar soap is actually not soap at all. The major chemical companies that make up your major brand “soaps”, deodorants, toothpastes, etc have carefully marketed their products to look like soap and most people refer to these as soap. In fact if you look at the labelling these products do not contain the word soap anywhere on their label. They call themselves moisturizing bars, beauty bars, etc. but not soap. The reason for this is that the Food and Drug Administration has a pretty strict guideline for what constitutes soap: “To be regulated as “soap,” the product must be composed mainly of the “alkali salts of fatty acids,” that is, the material you get when you combine fats or oils with an alkali, such as lye.”

    The major chemical companies worked very hard to make products that were cheap, plentiful, and easy to manufacture. They took a bunch of synthetic chemicals like lathering agents and detergent cleansers in order to mimic soap. Many of these detergent bars are missing glycerin (a natural byproduct of the natural soap-making process), and other beneficial properties of real soap.

    The following is a list of some of the chemicals that are found in these detergent cleansers. The best way to avoid these chemicals is to use natural soap like ours:

    Triclosan: a key ingredient in antibacterial products. According to the FDA: “Animal studies have shown that triclosan alters hormone regulation.” and “Other studies in bacteria have raised the possibility that triclosan contributes to making bacteria resistant to antibiotics.”

    Propylene Glycol: a petroleum-based product that is dangerous when inhaled, an irritant, and a metabolic disruptor. Known to exert high levels of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) during degradation in surface waters. This process can adversely affect aquatic life by consuming oxygen needed by aquatic organisms for survival.

    Polyethylene Glycol: can be a skin sensitizer, resulting in allergic contact dermatitis in some individuals.

    Sodium Lauryl Sulfate: causes skin irritation, there are studies that point to residual levels of Sodium Lauryl Sulfate in the brain, lungs, liver, and heart.  It has been linked to hormone imbalance because it mimics Estrogen.

    Butylated Hydroxytoluene: acts as a synthetic vitamin E. It is absorbed through skin. Long-term and repeated exposure caused renal and hepatic damage in rats.

    So how can you avoid chemical’s? By using OUR SOAP! Alkali salts of fatty acids from all natural vegetable oils which are formed when those oils are mixed with lye. The lye is not existent after the chemical reaction with the fatty acids in the oils and is no longer present in the final product. Then we add essential oils (literally the oils of the natural product itself) of things like lavender, tea tree, etc. And of course there is the goat milk, which comes directly from our small diary goat farm. We never add anything that isn’t natural and necessary for a great bar of soap.