bethanythemartian
Scholar
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2007
- Messages
- 50
My friend and I are starting a business in candles, bath and beauty (et cetera) and we have made each other a firm no-woo promise. There are many woo claims in this field- not including the approximately bajillion and 2 about freaking candles. "Light green candles for money!" (Your money, no doubt.)
Today, I came up on one that sort of blind-sided me. Bath salts. I've seen mineral baths and salts claim to be... oh, to cure psoriasis and arthritis and excema and blahblahblah. Every time I see 'used and tested for thousands of years' it sets off the crapometer. Also, if i see psoriasis, arthritis, and excema all cured by the same thing.
Weird thing is, we are planning on making bath salts, and I hadn't even thought about it. It's cheap, easy, and fast to throw together.
So, after the long story (sorry) here's my question: what do salt/minerals do to the water, and do they make your skin softer? I know minerals can make water 'soft' (or think I know that, I could be wrong) and 'hard', and I'm pretty sure salt has something to do with ionizing water particles, but I don't know how that translates into the skin. I've heard that salty water helps open wounds heal faster, although I don't remember where I heard that. I just don't know much about the science, and would love if someone who knows about what salts and minerals do in water could explain it to me.
And, because I thought it was funny: "We know that a program of 18 Kilos of Dead Sea Salt (quantity needed for 3 baths per week for 6 weeks) at health food stores would break the bank."
Isn't that something like 2 pounds a bath? (I'm not 100% familiar with kilos.) No wonder it breaks the bank.
Today, I came up on one that sort of blind-sided me. Bath salts. I've seen mineral baths and salts claim to be... oh, to cure psoriasis and arthritis and excema and blahblahblah. Every time I see 'used and tested for thousands of years' it sets off the crapometer. Also, if i see psoriasis, arthritis, and excema all cured by the same thing.
Weird thing is, we are planning on making bath salts, and I hadn't even thought about it. It's cheap, easy, and fast to throw together.
So, after the long story (sorry) here's my question: what do salt/minerals do to the water, and do they make your skin softer? I know minerals can make water 'soft' (or think I know that, I could be wrong) and 'hard', and I'm pretty sure salt has something to do with ionizing water particles, but I don't know how that translates into the skin. I've heard that salty water helps open wounds heal faster, although I don't remember where I heard that. I just don't know much about the science, and would love if someone who knows about what salts and minerals do in water could explain it to me.
And, because I thought it was funny: "We know that a program of 18 Kilos of Dead Sea Salt (quantity needed for 3 baths per week for 6 weeks) at health food stores would break the bank."
Isn't that something like 2 pounds a bath? (I'm not 100% familiar with kilos.) No wonder it breaks the bank.
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