I Want Bubbles!

Bubble bath is not a natural product. I know some people look at the ingredients in our Bubble Wash and turn up their noses. But, really "natural" people don't buy bubble bath because bubble bath is not natural. A bath bomb would be more appropriate for them.  Big fluffy bubbles that last and last are not natural. In nature, things foam but big bubbles pop very quickly.  Since, one of the things that I hate most, is a natural product that doesn't perform like it should, I certainly don't want to make one.

 I have tried those so called, natural "bubble baths" and the bubbles were gone before I could get the kids in. And if you have hard water, forget about it. You could pour a cup of soap in the bathtub and still not get any bubbles. So no, I can't offer you a sulfate free bubble bath but, what I can offer you is the gentlest bubble bath that I can produce with the technology that we have today. My daughter Zoe has eczema and is allergic to almost everything.  She uses this bubble bath all the time, without incident, and she loves it.  You only need to use a small amount of the product to produces copious amounts of bubbles in almost any type of water and if you have jets in your tub you'll be up to your ears in bubbles. It is not drying and leaves your skin feeling super soft, best bubbles ever.


Comments

  1. I've gone down this road too. What are the ingredients of yours?

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    1. https://www.etsy.com/listing/178548165/moonshine-body-wash-bubble-bath-black

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  2. You can do a lot better than that by your description. I can give you help with how. You can start by looking at mine:

    diammonium lauryl sulfosuccinate
    lauramidopropyl betaine
    disodium laureth sulfosuccinate

    A lot gentler than your ingredients, yet it foams very densely, a lot like soap lather, provided you aerate it well, as by splashing with hands -- which kids love to do. You can read more at http://users.bestweb.net/~robgood/lather.html .

    You don't need ether sulfates, alcohol sulfates, or ethanolamides -- certainly not all 3 as your formula uses -- to make plenty of foam in even very hard water. You do have the right idea by combining an alkamidopropyl betaine with an ether sulfate. In fact if you just left out the sodium lauryl (unethoxylated) sulfate and the cocamide DEA, and increased the cocamidopropyl betaine to compensate for the absence of cocamide DEA, you'd have a much better formula if you'll accept light, fluffy, large-bubble foam. A mixture of lauramidopropyl & palmitamidopropyl betaine makes a more cottony foam & softens skin better than cocamidopropyl betaine. Ivory dishwashing liquid for a brief period had palmitamidopropyl (they called it cetamidopropyl) betaine along with an ether sulfate (& probably an amine oxide), and it was not only very mild & sudsy, but removed flakes from skin.

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  3. Nice Blog..
    Thanks For Sharing These Blog With Us...
    Bath Soaks

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