Archive for the ‘Uses for Soap’ Category

Soap for Teeth

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

toothbrushing-smI was looking through my book of Hall’s Journal of Health (1859), and found an interesting article in the August issue of that year.  It piqued my interest, so I did a little research.

Here’s the article:

Best Tooth Wash

On one occasion, a correspondent for a water-cure journal inquired if a statement of ours was true, that washing the teeth with pure white soap had a tendency to prevent to collection of tartar on the teeth.  The editor replied simply, “It is all fudge.”

He, perhaps, could not conceive how such a thing a common as soft soap could keep the teeth clear of tartar accretions, which were so hard that a steel instrument is employed by dentists to remove them.  He evidently did not know that recent chemical and microscopical investigations, carefully conducted with all the aids of dental science, had demonstrated that this tartar was the product of a living insect , upon which neither vinegar nor tobacco juice had any effect whatever, but which was instantly destroyed by soap-suds; and following up this fact, persons have kept their teeth perfectly clear of re-accumulations of tartar, by simply washing them with white soap and brush, night and morning.  Now and then it will fail, because some tartar is made by an insect which is but little affected by soapsuds.

Okay, so the information IS 150 years old, and the “insects” he is referring to are probably bacteria.  But there’s plenty of evidence to support the fact that soap kills bacteria.

So why isn’t all “toothpaste” made out of soap? Oh MY!!  The controversy!! It’s as bad as Roswell and Area 51.  Not an arena I want to step into here.

I did find some information that deals with research on the use of soap instead of commercial toothpaste formulations.

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Promote the Benefits of Soap and Water

Saturday, April 25th, 2009
Poster - www.washup.org

Poster - www.washup.org

As we all know, washing with soap and water is one of the very best ways to prevent the spread of disease, including colds, flu, and other illnesses.  The CDC has long been promoting the benefits of washing with soap and water.  But a study by the The Soap and Detergent Association (SDA) and the American Society of Microbiology (ASM) showed that:

  • One-third of men don’t wash their hands in public restrooms
  • 88% of women do lather up after using public facilities
  • 92% say they wash their hands in public restrooms, but only 77% were observed actually doing so

So, the SDA and ASM have teamed up to produce hand hygiene educational brochures to help inform both adults and children of the benefits of hand-washing with soap and water.  It’s another way to promote the benefits of soap.

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Wool and Soap

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009
Fulling a Wool Scarf from CuriousWeaver curiousweaver.id.au

Fulling a Wool Scarf from CuriousWeaver curiousweaver.id.au/

I found a reference in The Art of Soap-Making by Alexander Watt (1918) which describes “fulling soaps”.  Being unsure of what, exactly, “fulling” really was, I wasn’t sure if the soap described would be suitable for washing woolens as well.

Turns out not, but I did make some interesting discoveries along the way.  And I learned how to wash and care for my wool sweaters and shirts … it wasn’t anything like what I had been told!

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Soap in the Garden

Sunday, April 19th, 2009
Aphid infestation on hybrid tea rose<br>Anne W. Gideon, Bugwood.org

Aphid infestation on hybrid tea rose
Anne W. Gideon, Bugwood.org

We think of soap as being used for cleaning purposes, but soap has also been used for centuries as an all-purpose pesticide against a number of different common garden pests, including aphids, spider mites, bugs of all sorts, Japanese Beetles, cockroaches, moles, deer and rabbits.

A study carried out in Turkey in 2000 which tested the effects of using natural pesticides on the yield and quality of cucumbers grown under greenhouse conditions showed that there were no significant differences between the yield and fruit properties when natural (soap-based) pesticides or conventional pesticides were used.

The recipes are simple, can be made at home and adapted for for specific uses.

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