Dr Bronner's
$27.95 RRP $23.85 Members

Available: In Stock

Pure-Castile Soap
Cherry Blossom
473ml

Sweet spring is in the air with this traditional Castile soap. This bar is made with organic oils for a deep, refreshing clean. Dr. Bronner’s soap is concentrated, biodegradable, versatile and effective. Made with organic and certified fair trade ingredients, packaged in a 100% post-consumer recycled bottle.

Only 6 Available

The benefits.

  • Considered 3x more concentrated than commercial liquid soaps
  • Lathers naturally, cleanses and protects skin (antibacterial properties)
  • Helps smooth and soothe dry and irritated skin (monounsaturated fats)
  • Helps ease eczema and psoriasis (anti-inflammatory properties)

What goes in.

Water, Organic Coconut Oil*, Potassium Hydroxide**, Organic Palm Kernel Oil*, Organic Olive Oil*, Natural Cherry Blossom Fragrance, Organic Hemp Oil, Organic Jojoba Oil, Citric Acid, Tocopherol
*None remains after saponifying oils into soap & glycerin.

What's kept out.

Synthetic preservatives, detergents, foaming agents.

Did you know?

Did you know many commercial personal and household cleaning products list sodium lauroyl and/or sodium cocoate as a main ingredient? The first is a detergent and emulsifier which dries out skin, while the second strips the skin of oil, causing irritation. A “foam-fresh” feeling, but at what cost?

Geography.

Born in the USA.

Hot tip.

This soap is famous for its 18-in-1 promise. Face, body, hair, dishes, laundry, mopping, pets – it does it all.

Dr Bronner's

You may not expect a 150-year-old company to be setting the bar on corporate ethics, but Dr. Bronner’s is no ordinary company. This family-owned and run business has been making socially and environmentally responsible soaps of the highest quality from day one – and then dedicating their profits to help make a better world. Pioneers of organic personal-care products in the US, supporters of animal advocacy organisations, and creators of fair-trade projects across the world to ensure the just treatment of farmers and workers? We think Saint Bronner’s would be a more accurate description.