Save (AND BRING!) your one gallon jugs! Also/And acquire and bring 5 gallon containers if wanted.
We'll have one box of washing soda and one box of borax that we can all share.
PLEASE BRING your own bar of laundry soap - Fels Naptha is the one I've had the most experience with, but others are listed below.
Making your own laundry soap is one of the easiest parts of a transition to natural living. It is also a great way to save money on laundry detergent and is incredibly easy to make.
Why switch to natural laundry soap, you ask? Conventional laundry detergent is loaded with chemicals like sulfates, fragrances, phenols and more. Many brands contain things like petroleum distillates, which are linked to cancer and lung disease. Fragrances in these detergents are made of a mix of harmful chemicals.
Luckily, making your own laundry soap is an easy and fast process! You only need three basic ingredients to make either a powdered or liquid laundry soap:
- Washing Soda (Arm and Hammer Brand available at most stores)
- Borax (20 Mule Team Borax available at most grocery stores)
- Bar Soap (Dr. Bronner’s, Ivory, or other natural, unscented bar soap - Fels Naptha)
Wonder what’s in these ingredients? Borax is a naturally occurring mineral made up of sodium, boron, oxygen, and water. It is an ingredient in most of the natural soaps available now (Seventh Generation, etc.) but it is much more inexpensive to make yourself.
Washing Soda, sometimes called sodium carbonate or soda ash, is made from common salt and limestone or found as natural deposits.
Dr. Bronner’s soaps are fair trade and made with vegetable castille soap and pure organic oils.
To Make powdered laundry soap:
- Grate the bar soap or mix in food processor until finely ground. Use the soap of your choice. I personally use Dr. Bronner’s Pure Castille Bar Soap because of its exceptional quality, and because it is available in several different natural scents like lavender, tea tree, peppermint, almond and others.
- In a large bowl, mix 2 parts washing soda, 2 parts Borax and 1 part grated soap. (Add a few teaspoons of baking soda if desired).
- Store in closed container. I keep mine in quart or half gallon mason jars. If you are using a big enough container, you can skip step 2 and just put all ingredients in storage container or jar and shake.
- Use 1/8 to 1/4 cup per load of laundry.
To make liquid Laundry Soap:
- Grate one bar of soap with cheese grater or food processor.
- Put grated soap in pan with 2 quarts water and gradually heat, stirring constantly until soap is completely dissolved.
- Put 4.5 gallons of really hot tap water in a 5-gallon bucket (available for free in bakeries at grocery stores, just ask them) and stir in 1 cup of borax and 1 cup of Washing Soda until completely dissolved.
- Pour soap mixture from pan into 5-gallon bucket. Stir well.
- Cover and leave overnight.
- Shake or stir until smooth and pour into gallon jugs or other containers.
- Use 1/2 to 1 cup per load.
On the powdered recipe, I spent (at the time of writing the post):
- One 55 ounce box Washing Soda- $3.49 (Note: all of these are much more expensive on Amazon!)
- One 76 ounce box of Borax – $4.99 ($3.79 at Winco)
- One Bar Dr. Bronner’s Pure Castille Bar Soap- $2.99 (Fels Naptha $1.22 @ Winco)
http://wellnessmama.com/462/how-to-make-nautral-homemade-laundry-detergent/
Baskin Robbins may have containers that would work.
ReplyDelete