Spotlight: Pear Vanilla Oatmeal Glycerin Artisan Tile Soap
Tuesday, August 26th, 2008Pear Vanilla Oatmeal Glycerin Artisan Tile Soap, originally uploaded by 4thAveSoapCo.
This soap is AMAZING. I used a bar and loved it!
The smell is perfect, You can smell it, but it doesn’t overwhelm you. Sweet and warm with a hint of juicy fruit. The oatmeal adds a slight touch of scrub, not a harsh scrub at all.
I used it as a kitchen sink soap. The foodie smell was perfect and and the slight scrub from the very fine oatmeal was great for scrubbing off whatever I had gotten myself into while cooking.
What I found surprising about this soap, was how long the design stayed on the soap. Even now, as my bar of soap lies by the sink measuring less than an inch wide, you can STILL see traces of the beautiful design that once was.
This soap has a great lather. It really works well for cutting through grease. I would recommend 4thAveSoapCo to everyone.



What types of crafts do you make? Handmade soaps and lip balms using quality ingredients, only the best oils and color pigments I can find, and insane passion for what I do mixed into every bar.
new fragrance oils I tear open the box and immediately open each one to get a full whiff of the essence of what I will be working with. And I write down what it reminds me of…how it makes me feel. It’s from there I can take the next step: using it properly to invoke those same feelings and memories in you. I want to capture a moment of life in every single bar.
What makes your products special? None of my soaps contain Sodium Lauryl Sulfate (SLS) or Sodium Laureth Sulfate (SLES) which is known to irritate the skin. The sodium lauryl sulfate found in commercial soaps and some other soaps on Etsy (it’s claimed as a lathering agent) is exactly the same as you would find in a car wash or even a garage, where it is used to degrease car engines. In the same way as it dissolves the grease on car engines, sodium lauryl sulfate also dissolves the oils on your skin, which can cause a drying effect. It is also well documented that it denatures skin proteins, which causes not only irritation, but also allows environmental contaminants easier access to the lower, sensitive layers of the skin. Hence, NONE of my soaps contain either SLS or SLES.
Learn ALL you can about it. Soap making isn’t a business you can just start up one day and jump into. You have to be well-aware of the types of ingredients you will be working with, how to properly measure and handle lye and other fats, the laws regulating the labeling and selling of cosmetic items, the properties of essential oils and fragrance oils you will be working with, just to name a few. Take some classes, read up all you can on the saponification process (the chemical reaction that occurs when fats or oils come into contact with lye) and then read some more. Talk to people in the industry and join soap making forums




