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Cosmetic/educational only. Patch-test first. This is water-based and preservative-free — make small batches, keep it clean, and use within about a month (or add a broad-spectrum preservative to extend it).

The simplest natural body wash is liquid castile soap (a concentrated olive/coconut oil soap) thinned with water and enriched with a little oil and glycerin so it cleans without stripping. It won't be thick like commercial gel — castile is naturally thin — but it lathers beautifully on a pouf.

Ingredients

  • ⅔ cup liquid castile soap (unscented)
  • ⅓ cup distilled water (or strong cooled herbal tea)
  • 1 tbsp light carrier oil (jojoba, almond, fractionated coconut)
  • 1 tbsp vegetable glycerin (humectant — keeps skin soft)
  • 15 drops essential oil
  • Optional: 1 tsp honey or aloe for extra soothing

Step-by-step

  1. Combine base. In a bottle, mix the castile soap and distilled water.
  2. Enrich. Add the carrier oil, glycerin and essential oils.
  3. Swirl, don't shake. Roll the bottle gently to combine — shaking just makes a foam head.
  4. Use. Squeeze onto a washcloth or pouf (it lathers far better than straight on skin). Give it a gentle swirl before each use, since natural ingredients can settle.

💧 Why it's thin (and how to thicken)

Castile soap doesn't thicken with salt the way detergent washes do. Embrace the thin texture, use a pouf, or add a small amount of xanthan gum (¼ tsp, pre-mixed) for a slightly thicker gel.

Troubleshooting

Separates/cloudy: normal with oils — swirl before use, or reduce the oil. Drying: add more glycerin or a touch more oil. Reacts on skin: some skip essential oils entirely for sensitive skin.

FAQ

Can I make it last longer? Yes — add a broad-spectrum preservative at the recommended rate and keep it months. Is castile + acidic skin OK? Castile is alkaline; most bodies tolerate it fine, but if your skin feels tight, follow with lotion. Foaming version? Dilute more (1 part soap : 3 parts water) and use a foaming pump.