On Reddit there's an opinionated person who's convinced himself that stearic acid in shave soaps is a "cheap" ingredient that artisans are using instead of using kokum or illipe. I explained the reason for using stearic acid isn't simply to cheap out while charging premium pricing, however he's also presented an argument that stearic acid is produced using nickel and that some nickel remains as a contaminant after it's produced. I've searched for how stearic acid is made and have not found any detailed process on how the stearic acid we use is made and am now slightly concerned. His source is a "chemist" he knows, however I've found another source stating the same-conveniently from the only shave soap maker that I've ever seen that does not use stearic acid:
https://sebumgold.com/pages/why-our-shaving-soap-is-the-purest-on-the-planet
In addition to the annoyingly misleading "information" they also present this link as their source:
https://bit.ly/2UrAN5J (pdf file)
ETA- while I highly doubt that the stearic acid we use does* contain great amounts of nickel (I'm imagining immediate DOS...) it'd be nice to know what process is used in making the stearic acid we're using in soap.
*edited, meant "does" not "does not"
https://sebumgold.com/pages/why-our-shaving-soap-is-the-purest-on-the-planet
Take a look at your top 5 soaps. Chances are the first ingredient on the list says one of these three things: Stearic Acid, Potassium Stearate, or Sodium Stearate. They are just 3 differrent ways to say stearic acid.
Stearic acid is very important to shaving soap to suspend a lather that does not break down. Other soapers typically use 50-70% of this cheap ingredient in their formula. The problem is, there is no such thing as a stearic acid nut, tree, or flower. So that means it is synthetically produced with chemicals; most commonly leached from Palm Oil by using a toxic nickel slurry as a catalyst. This can result in trace amounts of colloidal nickel in the finished product.
In addition to the annoyingly misleading "information" they also present this link as their source:
https://bit.ly/2UrAN5J (pdf file)
ETA- while I highly doubt that the stearic acid we use does* contain great amounts of nickel (I'm imagining immediate DOS...) it'd be nice to know what process is used in making the stearic acid we're using in soap.
*edited, meant "does" not "does not"
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