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Carshalton Lavender Soap
A relaxing and soothing soap, good to use after sun damage. Great for headache relief, eczema and dermatitis, made with Organic English Carshalton Lavender!
Usage Instructions
Safe for use by the whole family, lather across damp skin, rinsing with clean, warm water
Precautions
We only use pure essential oils, so do not use when pregnant or on children under 3.
Against Animal Testing
As a company specialising in a natural handmade product, we are against any form of animal testing.
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| Carshalton Lavender harvest day in July 2007. Why not pop along next year and enjoy the day picking Lavender as long as attractions and stalls. The Harvest will be held on the last but one weekend of July in 2008. |
| The OBSERVER community project of the year 2007 |
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We are pleased we can help by part of the Carshalton Lavender community project. The Carshalton Lavender products you purchase, help us to help fund the Carshalton Lavender project.
For full details of the award, please click here
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Safe & Chamical Free
All Naturallythinking Soaps are made the "old fashioned" way and therefore contain no Sodium Lauryl Sulphate, Parabens or Lanolin. Safe for use by the whole family
Matures with Age
Like a fine wine our Soaps mature with age, the longer you leave them the deeper their scents will become and the harder the bar will become, making it last even longer.
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At Naturallythinking we are proud to be associated with the Local Carshalton Lavender project, which is reviving the Lavender fields of Carshalton, Surrey, our home town.
Carshalton, Surrey was once the home of the worlds Lavender production, producing arguably the finest Lavender in the world. The Lavender is commonly known as "Mitcham Lavender", as the distillation plant used to be located on the Mitcham / Carshalton border at Figs Marsh. Indeed the Lavender fields stretched all the way from Wallington in the South to Mitcham in the North. A combination of competition from abroad, combined with demands for war time metal and then the post war London housing boom (the first large scale council estate was built at St Helier, Carshalton largely on the site of the Lavender fields), led to their demise. Towards the end of the 1990's local sustainable charity organisation, Bioregional started the revival project, claiming unused (often fly tipped) pieces of land and planting them with direct descendants of the original Lavender plants. These plants have been nurtured by community projects and harvested on an annual harvest event involving the whole community (for details of the next harvest click here), where everybody can get involved.
The Lavender produced is truly amazing, and you soon see why even the French admitted that Carshalton / Mitcham Lavender was the finest in the world. It is beautifully herbaceous giving a true feeling of the plant in all the products it is used. If Lavender has an "absolute" version, this would be it.
Increasingly, once again Carshalton is coming alive with the colour of Lavender and it is great for us to be able to use it and popularise it again.
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