Soap Nuts
Natural Laundry Detergent & Green Cleaning
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Jan 5
Soap nuts once again come to the rescue in my home. This time soap nuts got pressed into service as a chemical free upholstery cleaning solution.
We “live” in our home. In other words, we lie on the couch watching television and often nap on the couch or have overnight guests who sleep there. We’ve also been known to eat dinner or snack in front of the television which means more than a slight chance of food or drink spilled onto the upholstery.
Besides all of that abuse there’s more than a small bit of cigarette and cigar smoking that goes on in our home, especially when we have dinner quests. Over time all of that abuse can take its toll on the upholstery especially in the form of odors and stains from perspiration and smoke.
A few months ago my mate and I both noticed how much wear the couch (and love seat) were showing. There were obvious stains and a lingering stale odor. The living room furniture is over 6 years old and suffered through being closed up in our home in New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina then loaded into a moving truck and put into storage for a few days. So as you can guess the upholstery needed a good cleaning.
Like your sheets your skin is in contact with the furniture upholstery. We don’t want chemicals in our bed, on our clothes and skin, nor do we want them on the couch and love seat. It’s all part of our chemical free cleaning approach.
I had washed the pillows from the couch and love seat in the washer using soap nuts many times and am always thrilled at how soft and fresh they come out. But the cushions posed a problem because they are too big to put into the washer so I got brave right before the holidays and peeled the covers off them and tossed them into the washer with soap nuts. It’s icky, but the once soft fabric actually felt stiff from all the dirt and perspiration that had built up on the cushions over the years.
I let them soak in the cold water with the soap nuts for about fifteen minutes and swirled it all around with my hand a couple of times to be sure the water tension had broken and the stains were being presoaked. You really don’t realize how much dirt has built up in something over the years, until you see clear water turn brown from the dirt imbedded in the fabric
I then ran the washer as usual using cold water wash and rinse, and when I pulled the cushion covers out of the washer I was dumbstruck by how much lighter in color the tan areas were and how much brighter the black parts were. The fabric has big squares of black and tan with areas that are kind of tweed. The results of cleaning the upholstery with soap nuts was overhwhelming, and that was before they got dry.
Once dried, I took them out and replaced them onto the foam inserts and I could not believe how soft they were to the touch.
I am sure you could use soap nuts liquid in a carpet cleaner with an upholstery attachment, but since our foam cushions are so think I opted to remove the covers and wash them in the washing machine like regular laundry.
Soap nuts once again a perfect chemical free solution to an everyday cleaning task, and one less product I need to buy or package to recycle.
Soap nuts – chemical free upholstery cleaning made easy!
Tagged as: chemical free carpet cleaner, chemical free carpet cleaning, chemical free upholstery cleaner, chemical free upholstery cleaning, natural upholstery cleaner, removing odors from furnitureComments Off -
Oct 31
As the holiday gift giving season quickly approaches, everyone is counting pennies. Soap nuts are a perfect gift for so many reasons and for so many people.
Yesterday I started my gift list. Most of you are probably already doing that too.
So why are soap nuts the gift almost everyone I know will appreciate?
Soap nuts can be used for so many uses, from the most traditional use as a natural laundry detergent to the more obscure uses like chemical free car washing. I can’t think of a more thoughtful or useful gift than a natural product with multiple uses that protects the environment and the people who use it from harmful chemicals, while preserving and extending the life of your clothes.
So who can benefit from the gift of soap nuts? Well if you and I were sitting having coffee right now and you asked me that, here’s what I would tell you.
Soap nuts are the perfect gift for:
- College students
- Families
- Single people
- People with sensitive skin
- Treehuggers
- Families expecting a new baby
- Families with an infant or toddler
- People caring for the elderly or infirm
- People in the health care professions
- Auto mechanics
- Hair stylists
- Barbers
- Swimmers
- Gymnasts
- Runners
- Hikers
- Campers
- Hunters
- Fishing enthusiasts
- Asthma and allergy sufferers
And the list goes on, but for the moment let’s talk about athletes and outdoorsy types.
If you have a hunter, fishing enthusiast, swimmer, gymnast, runner, hiker, or camper in your life you know that their laundry needs are challenging.
Let’s start with hunting. Anyone who hunts or knows someone who does is well aware of the lengths they go to in order to be sure their presence is not obvious to the game. They go unwashed sometimes for days to be sure they don’t carry any “unnatural” scents with them into the outdoors. Soap nuts are fragrance free naturally, but besides that the clothing hunters wear is expensive and the camouflage colors help to make them invisible. So when these clothes get washed with traditional laundry detergents there is the chance of fragrance attaching itself to the clothing, not to mention the fading of colors.
More importantly the clothes worn directly against the body are designed to absorb and wick perspiration away from the skin to protect the hunter and retain their body heat. Traditional laudry detergents clog the fabric with residue and reduce the absorption of the material causing it to actually hold the moisture.
If you’ve ever gone hiking in cold weather you know what happens when your feet perspire and the moisture stays in the socks. Ouch! Aching feet that burn, wrinkle and sometimes crack, as well as the possibility of fungal growth in the boots and socks.
Soap nuts are a perfect gift for the hunter in your life for so many reasons. I won’t even get into the benefits they offer to the person who has the joy of washing the clothes when they come home from a hunting trip. Talk about smelly dirty laundry, no let’s not!
Let’s move on to athletes now. As athletic wear has become more technologically advanced and often designed with materials to reduce wind/water resistance to increase speed, athletic clothing fitting properly and hugging the body has become even more important. Lycra or spandex is the key to this body hugging aspect of athletic wear.
So what happens when you wash a swimmer or runner’s clothing in traditional laundry detergents? It breaks down the fabric just like it does with regular clothing. The result, sagging of the fabric. The swim wear and running wear is expensive even for the weekend athlete, so imagine the expense of buying new trunks every few weeks. Don’t forget that most competitive swimmers spend upwards of 4 hours a day in pools with toxic levels of chlorine which will also break down the fabric and fade the colors. If you watched the Olympics you noticed that the swimmers and divers wet themselves before entering the pool. They do that to reduce drag in the water. So if their swimwear repels the water as it does when the fabric is clogged with residue from traditional laundry detergent they lose time. No need to buy special laundry products just for these needs, soap nuts answer all these problems and are completely chemical free!
Go ahead think creatively and give those you love and the planet a gift that shows how much you care about them and the planet
Give environmentally safe, non-toxic, chemical free, natural NaturOli Soap Nuts gift baskets this holiday season, the planet and the recipient will thank you for many years to come.
Tagged as: althlete's laundry detergent, chlorine odor, environmentally friendly gift ideas, green gift ideas, green gift suggestions, green gifts, hunter's laundry detergent, natural gifts, natural laundry detergent, soap nuts, soap nuts uses, unscented laundry detergentComments Off -
Oct 13
I have never been a domestic goddess. On the contrary, I have always hated housework and cleaning, but until I started using soap nuts 4 months ago I didn’t understand why.
As a child I was often pressed into service to do laundry and clean the house when visiting my paternal grandmother. This woman was one of those “cleanliness is next to godliness” people. While I have no issues with that mentality my developing immune and respiratory system did have real issues with all the toxic chemicals she used to clean the house.
I never went home from visiting my father’s parents without a rash, a cough, or some kind of skin irritation.
That house was like a museum with plush white carpets and rooms that were barracaded except on the most special of occasions. Despite the house being a museum, rooms no one ever entered had to be scrubbed and polished from ceiling to floor.
An average weekend with her was a chemical manufacturer’s dream event. The crystal chandelier required that each of the 200 plus drop crystals be removed by hand, then soaked and scrubbed in ammonia and hand dried before being replaced. The black and white linoleum floor had to be first stripped, on one’s hands and knees, and then rewaxed with extreme care.
The museum of a living room had a round smoked glass table about 4 feet in diameter with little display areas for her porcelain figures each of which had to be scrubbed with some packaged cleaner, and then the table had to be cleaned with more ammonia based glass cleaner before everything was replaced.
Laundry was a nightmare for this grandchild, partly because my involvement began at about the age of six. She had one of those double tub washers with a ringer from one tub to the other. My grandfather wore white t-shirts and, of course, undershorts which meant the cloud of chlorine bleach that hung in the basement was so dense that I spent the better part of laundry day hacking with my eyes tearing. Scalding water was required to get things clean of course and one had to stick one’s hands down in the agitating tub just to be sure everything got a good dip in the toxic water.
Let’s not even discuss the scalding baths and being scrubbed with Ivory soap which dried my fragile skin out so much I went home with rashes and looking like a scalded lobster after every visit. I still can’t stand the smell of Ivory soap (99% pure what I always ask myself).
So, over the years every time I smelled bleach, ammonia, cleanser or any other cleaning product I would be transported back to standing on a milk carton at six years old ironing handkerchiefs, t-shirts, and even undershorts as the bleach stung my nose and lungs and my hands throbbed from the scalding bleach water they’d been immersed in tens of times each laundry day.
You can imagine that experiencing that kind of discomfort as a child and having allergies to almost everything the day I came into the world, could make a person HATE to clean anything for the rest of their life. Somehow, despite my oh so self-aware approach to life, I never GOT why I hated housework so much.
Then about four months ago I discovered soap nuts. Suddenly I looked forward to cleaning my house and doing my laundry. I looked so forward to it in fact that I started concocting new cleaning products using soap nuts liquid as the base. I even started to soak in the tub with soap nuts liquid and scrub my feet and toenails with soap nuts powder made into a paste to whiten and exfoliate them.
Soap nuts have not only made me love cleaning, they’ve also made my partner a happy soul because our ongoing “discussions” about when I planned to clean the house no longer are a part of our lives.
Clean house, happy cleaner, happy mate, and HAPPY ENVIRONMENT!
If you haven’t tried soap nuts as a natural laundry detergent or chemical free cleaner you simply MUST.
There’s only one place I recommend you buy soap nuts though. NaturOli understands that not only are they selling an environmentally friendly detergent, but that there are people like me who really don’t want to leave behind a wake of toxic chemicals for future generations to deal with. They package everything in recycled, recyclable, or biodegradable packaging.
Tagged as: chemical free cleaners, chemical free cleaning, chemical free glass cleaner, chemical free laundry detergent, enviromentally friendly cleaning products, environmentally friendly cleaners, environmentally friendly laundry detergent, homemade cleaners, natural chemical free exfoliant, natural laundry detergent, soap nut uses, soap nuts, soap nuts liquid, soap nuts powder, soap nuts suppliersComments Off -
Jul 20
A washing machine designed specifically for soapnut users.
As you probably already know, soapnuts have been used for centuries in places like India and Nepal as a chemical free laundry detergent. Levente Szabó from Moholy-Nagy University of Art & Design, Hungary has designed a washing machine which won Electrolux Design Lab 2007 competition. The 2007 Electrolux Design Lab challenged students to come up with environmentally-sound, commercially-viable products and solutions that would enable consumers to live in greater harmony with the environment.
So if you are looking for more ways to live in greater harmony with the environment and aren’t ready to revert to washing your clothes by the stream and pounding them on a rock to get them clean while protecting the environment you should seriously consider looking for Electrolux E-Wash.
Of course, soapnuts can be used in a standard washing machine and are ideal for front loading machines because of the low sudsing the soapnuts generate.
I use soapnuts in place of dishwashing detergent also and have never been so happy to do dishes or laundry. There is an especially heart-warming feeling to knowing I am protecting the environment and my family from toxic chemicals, reducing the amount of pollution and waste our household generates and reducing the cost of my housekeeping expenses.
Imagine all that from something that grows on a tree, is about the size of a large grape, reduces the need for fabric softeners and dryer sheets, improves the economic situation for the people who harvest them, costs the consumer less than twenty cents per load of laundry, is harvested without the expenditure of fossil fuels or machinery, and does exactly what it promises to do.
Who wouldn’t want to use soapnuts?
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Jul 16
Once you’ve used soap nuts as an alternative to laundry detergent and seen how amazing they are, you will no doubt want to find more uses for them.
I’ve replaced about 80 percent of the toxic, chemical based cleaners in my home with soap nuts in the last month. Even though I’ve found so many uses for them I am always looking for more ways to use soap nuts, which brought me to this great article on CopperWiki.
Soapnut , which has a great deal of background about what soap nuts are, but also has sections on uses for them for cleaning and for health related conditions.
Here’s an excerpt of the article to get you started with creative uses for soap nuts:
- Natural Laundry Detergent
Hand wash or machine wash, when used with cold water tends to soften clothing. Especially used for fine wool and silk in preference to chemicals. - Powder, Shampoo and Skin Cleaner
Soap nut is excellent for washing and bathing both humans and pets. It acts as a natural exfoliant and leaves the skin with a soft, smooth layer which protects against infections and insects. It also prevents hair loss. - Pesticide-Buster
The Soap nut solution can be used as a spray to repel and prevent a wide variety of pests and blight, including aphids and blackfly. Recently in Agriculture Research Institute, Taiwan, a molluscicide and a fungicide were developed with the use of extracts from Sapindus mukorossi seeds, effectively controlling golden apple snail (Ampullarium canaliculatus) and powdery mildew on muskmelon and tomato. - General Purpose Cleaner
Cars, Motorbikes, Jewellery & Silverware wash: Gives a glossy finish removing dirt and grease. It is also an excellent wash for Mechanic’s hands, stained hands due to the same reason. - Toothpaste
- Fruits & Vegetables Wash: Most of us are unaware that many of the fruits and vegetables we eat are grown using harmful chemicals and sprayed with pesticides to increase their shelf-life. Scientific tests have shown that a ten minute soak in soap nut solution will remove upto 95% of the surface pesticides and chemical residues.
- Cardamom Wash: Used for washing and bleaching cardamoms to improve the colour & flavour.
- For cleaning & washing dishes, floors, glass and metal surfaces: Acts as a disinfectant and is 100% biological and biodegradable. It is also excellent for septic tank drainage systems.
- Mordant: It acts as a fantastic mordant in the process of vegetable dyeing of the silk and cotton yarns, removing the need for both alum and caustic soda and rendering the fibres soft and yielding to colour-depth and fastness. No other mordant is required for most natural dyes as soap nut has a lovely light brown natural dye.
- Medicinal purposes: It is used commonly in the Indian Ayurvedic Healing system for
Skin problems, eczema, chronic itching, removing pimples, psoriasis and the treatment of scabies.
Dandruff
Lice and and other parasites
People with allergies, neurodermatitis and people with sensitive skin, should use soap nuts as other chemical detergents often provoke an aggravation of their ailment.
The fruits are credited with expectorant and emetic properties and when prepared by an Ayurvedic doctor it can treat epilepsy, chlorosis and excessive salivation. It is also used as a sedative to the uterus and is used to ease childbirth. It can also be prepared as a digestive aid, an anti-venom, or to treat diarrhea, cholera and paralysis.
The powdered seeds are said to possess insecticide properties. They are employed in the treatment of dental caries. - Reetha fruit is so rich in iron it is considered a hemolytic and is used often to treat anemia.
- The soap nut tree when in bloom Attracts Butterflies”
Be sure to read the entire article if you have time because there is other great information about soap nuts there, including information about growing a soapnut tree.
Again the link to the entire article on CopperWiki is http://www.copperwiki.org/index.php/Soapnut
If you want to purchase soapnuts now without waiting for my reviews then visit our Order Soapnuts page for a list of suppliers.
Tagged as: chemical free car wash, chemical free glass cleaner, chemical free jewelry cleaner, chemical free laundry detergent, chemical free pet shampoo, environmentally friendly cleaners, natural chemical free exfoliant, natural laundry detergent, reetha, soap nut cleaners, soap nut usesComments Off - Natural Laundry Detergent
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Jul 6
Friday night I had a houseful of dinner guests. Earlier in the week when we were formalizing the time for the dinner, I had shared my discovery and successes using soap nuts with a friend.
My friend is a working mom with two teenage kids. Her son is 15 and a competitive swimmer and her daughter is 12. You can probably imagine her laundry challenges, everything from wet towels to chlorine saturated swimming trunks in addition to the multiple outift changes these teens make every day. Since she works full time in addition to her kids extra-curricular activities you might guess that her time is precious and she may not get to the laundry every day. So for her, soap nuts sounded like a gift from heaven.
I gave her a small plastic bag with about 40 soap nuts in it, figuring this would cover her for a few weeks. I explained that she should put 3-4 soap nuts in the small muslin bag and drop it into the washing machine with her laundry. I also told her that those same 3-4 soap nuts could be used for at least 5 loads of laundry in the same day, and to just drop them in the garbage disposal when they were used. She was so excited to get home and try them. But while we sat on the patio after dinner enjoying coffee I decided to do an informal bit of market reasearch on our other guests. Only one person besides my mate had heard about soap nuts from me, so there wasn’t any predisposed assumption of what they would notice during the touch test.
I took two white towels from my linen closet and brought them out to the patio. One had been washed weeks ago using standard laundry detergent and dried with dyer sheets, the other had been washed with soap nuts and no additional laundry products or dryer sheets to increase softness.
I started with my friend and handed her each towel, asking her only to “feel” them. As I put the second one in her hand she looked up at me and said “Wow this one is really soft!”. I then handed each towel to her teenage son, mixing them up as I handed them to him so he would not be prejudiced. He too noticed the difference in softness.
Since we had music on the outdoor speakers the other guests on the opposite side of the patio had no idea what I was doing or why. Each noticed a difference and immediately asked why I was handing these towels around.
Once everyone had felt the two towels I explained what the “test” was about. They were all thrilled to hear that a natural and affordable chemical free laundry detergent alternative existed, and all wanted to know where to buy them. Each one offered a thought on why soa pnuts would be a great addition to their homes.
Here’s the list of thoughts they offered on the benefits of using soap nuts:
- There is no packaging to recycle.
- Reduced cost because you only need one product to clean, soften, and sanitize your laundry.
- Environmentally friendly because no chemicals are going out the drain into the sewage system or water table.
- Laundry has a fresh scent after washing without having to add anything.
- Clothes and towels looking new longer because there are no harsh chemicals to break down the fabric fibers or colors.
- No added scent to irritate sensitive noses or skin, especially great for babies.
- Soap nuts are hypo-allergenic so they won’t bother people with allergies or skin irritations.
- No energy is used in the harvesting or manufacturing so there is little negative environmental impact from soap nuts
I have read on some sites that one may want to add an oxygen bleach to whiten whites, but I have not found that I need to do that. My partner is an “old-fashioned” sort who still carries and uses white cotton handkerchiefs. Since we live in the south he often wears white so he has many pairs of white underwear. All the whites I’ve washed with soap nuts exclusively have come out as white or whiter than they did when I used regular laundry soap and bleach. Big difference though for me was the stench of bleach in the house and the amount of spray starch I needed to use on the handkerchiefs when I iron them. Much less starch is necessary because the handkerchiefs are soft to start and almost wrinkle free right out the dryer.
I showed our dinner guests the Lullwater Soapnuts packaging, which is a muslin bag with the instructions printed on the bag itself. Inside is a thin plastic bag to keep the soap nuts fresher longer and to keep the saponin from drying out in shipping and also in storage. Everyone was also really impressed with the minimal packaging.
Another company I got a sample from sent a printed color tri-fold brochure which kind of bothered me because one of the reasons I switched to using soapnut berries was to cut down on recycling and on waste. If they’d at least printed their brochure on recycled paper with single color ink I would have been less displeased.
Lullwater has the best retail price I have found so far.
I did get a great deal on bulk soap nuts from a company in Canada that I found on Ebay. I am waiting on those to arrive so I can tell you how they compare in freshness to the Lullwater Soapnuts. I will also give you a packaging comparison on those.
I made up another batch of soapnut tea on Friday in preparation for the tons of dishes, silverware, and stemware I have to wash after one of these dinner parties. I haven’t calculated cost on using soapnuts in the dishwasher yet, but one thing I did notice is that even my old dishes which have begun to look dull from the surface scratches look brighter and less worn. My flatware looks brighter, and so do my stainless steel sinks because I use soapnut liquid to wash the glasses and fragile pieces I don’t want to put in the dishwasher. Of course those scratches on my older dishes are also places for bacteria to grow so using the soapnuts with vinegar in the rinse agent cup puts my mind at ease that my dishes are sanitized without using harsh chemicals.
Once my shipment from the Canadien company arrives I’ll be doing more experiments with homemade chemical free cleaners using soap nuts liquid as a base.
My family is coming to visit at the end of July to celebrate my sister’s 50th birthday and I can’t wait to share the soap nuts with them. I’ve told them both about how great they are, but even though they know how meticulous and critical I can be and trust my judgment this weekend I was convinced that feeling is truly believing even if the soap nuts market research I did was informal.
My next post will be about growing your own soapnut trees and the things to consider before you decide this is a good idea.
Tagged as: chemical free dishwashing detergent, chemical free laundry detergent, chemical free pot and pan soap, soap nut cleaners, soapberryComments Off -
Jun 27
We hope you’ll find the soap nuts information we offer helpful.
Our goal is to be a central resource for all the available information about soap nuts online. If you find a resource we overlook please post a comment and share it with others.
What we’ll be providing is information about soap nuts, where to buy them, reviews of soap nuts suppliers, and creative ways to incorporate soap nuts into your life, for all purpose a chemical free cleaning.
Rarely are we impressed with something as much as we have been impressed by the excellent cleaning results of soap nuts. Often we find claims of online merchants for some products can be overblown marketing hype. Not true in respect to soap nuts. They are everything they are cracked up to be (pardon the pun).
What is most impressive to us about soap nuts is that they are sustainable, environmentally friendly, and completely natural. In fact soap nuts actually add the opportunity for economic growth to the indigenous people who harvest them, and better yet there is no machinery is used in the harvesting. The soap nuts fall to the ground and are gathered, deseeded, and generally packaged in the most minimal way.
A win for all involved in the use of soapnuts as an alternative to manufactured detergents, soaps, dishwasher powder or liquid, shampoos, and window cleaners.
Please visit http://soap-nuts.info often to discover all the ways you can use soap nuts in your everyday life.
If you enjoy our blog, or find the information of value to someone you know please be sure to share the link with others.
Tagged as: chemical free laundry detergent, chinese soapberry, enviromentally friendly cleaning products, soap berry, soap nut, soap nuts, soap nuts liquid, soap nuts shampoo, soap nuts suppliers, soapberry, washnutsComments Off



