Finding a Safe, Natural Deodorant

I have been very hesitant to write this post, because there is so much controversy over what makes a “safe” deodorant.  But I want to share with you the products I have researched and what I choose to use as a natural deodorant. 


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Note: I have found a new favorite deodorant, a homemade version.  I now use this homemade natural deodorant.  I found this recipe works best for me, but for a commercially available option, the deodorant in this post is the best option for me.

Crystal Stick Body Deodorant – a Natural Deodorant

My choice natural deodorant is Crystal Stick Body Deodorant.  It has a single ingredient: Potassium Alum (Natural Mineral Salts).  Unlike conventional deodorant, to use, you need to wet the end of the deodorant stick before rubbing on skin.  The water dissolves the outer layer of the crystal stick, so when rubbed on skin and the application water evaporates, it leaves a thin layer of the mineral.  I’ve found that it dries quickly.  Unlike the liquid roll-on deodorants, as soon as I apply I go about my routine.  I don’t worry about keeping my arms in the air waiting for it to dry, and I have not noticed any ill effects.   

natural deodorant ingredients & instructions

Pros

It got an Environmental Working Group, or EWG, rating of 1, on a scale of 1-5, with 1 being best/safest. 

Crystal Stick Body Deodorant is effective at preventing stinky sweat.

It lasts a long time.   I’ve been using mine for 2.5 years so far, and still have at least 1/3 of my 4.5 oz stick remaining.  I estimate it’ll last me 3-4 years.  I use it once or twice a day. 

There is no color, no clumping, no scents.  It does not mark or stain clothing. 

I have never had any kind of skin reaction. 

It is deodorant only, not antiperspirant.  

Cons 

Crystal Stick Body Deodorant comes in plastic packaging. 

It is deodorant only, not antiperspirant.  

You’re probably thinking that I have an error there.  I listed “it is deodorant only, not antiperspirant” as both a pro and a con.  Not an error, this is intentional.  I consider it a pro because sweating is a natural, healthy bodily function.  Sweating cools the body.  Using antiperspirants blocks sweat from being released.  I believe that blocking sweat is not good for the body (just my personal opinion).  But, it is a con because sweating and sweat stains are annoying.  

Other options I’ve used

Prior to me becoming more conscious of chemicals in products and going into my body, I used several different deodorants and antiperspirants.  Due to my known skin sensitivities, I knew I needed to avoid fragrances.  But little did I know even these “sensitive” products were laden with irritating, unhealthy chemicals.

Commercially available products I have tried and no longer use
  1. Dove Antiperspirant & Deodorant, for Sensitive Skin: EWG rating 4
  2. Secret Clinical Strength Women’s Antiperspirant & Deodorant, Sensitive/Hypoallergenic Unscented: EWG rating 4
  3. Ban Antiperspirant & Deodorant, Unscented: EWG rating 1 

I no longer use Dove or Secret due to the ingredients which I believe are unhealthy and irritating.  The Ban deodorant & Antiperspirant didn’t work well for me as an antiperspirant, and for simply a deodorant, I prefer Crystal Stick for its short ingredient list and low price. 

Homemade natural deodorants I have tried and no longer use

As you probably know by now, I am a big fan of DIY and making my own products.  So naturally, I did try making my own deodorant.  I tried this detoxifying deodorant and coconut oil with arrowroot powder dabbed on.  But, they took multiple ingredients and effort to make and use, the oils felt kind of weird on my skin.  I found Crystal Stick to be cheaper, easier, more comfortable, more travel-friendly, and equally or more effective than the homemade versions.  

Other deodorant options

If you’re looking for other ideas and options for natural or unscented deodorants and antiperspirants, this post may help.  It includes some that I have already mentioned, but others that I have not tried, and includes men’s as well as women’s deodorants and antiperspirants.   Note that this contains natural deodorants and those with synthetic chemicals. 

Cost

As of November 2017, Crystal Stick Body Deodorant is about $11 for 2-4.25oz sticks on Amazon, or about $7 each at Stop & Shop and CVS.  Assuming, conservatively, that one stick lasts 3 years, using this deodorant costs only $11/2 sticks/3 years=$1.83 per year. 

Conventional deodorants typically cost $3-$6 per tube, and used to last me 6 months or less.  $1.83 for a year’s use of Crystal Stick versus $6+ for a year’s use of conventional deodorant.  Here’s another case where the healthier option is the more frugal option!

natural deodorant regular & travel size

The manufacturer also sells a 1.5 oz travel size Crystal Stick Body Deodorant, which I have only found on Amazon.  It’s $6.30 for 2-1.5 oz tubes as of November 2017.   

 

Have you tried another more natural deodorant?  Please share the good or the bad in the comments below!

How to wash towels

I recently came across this article in Time and, frankly, was pretty horrified.  I immediately set out to change the way that I clean my towels.  Something that really, truly cleans the towels, but is still environmentally friendly.  After a bit of research and testing, I came up with this routine and method to wash towels.


Disclaimer:  This post contains affiliate links.  See my Disclosure Policy for more information.


Title How to Wash Towels Thoroughly

Towels get gross, fast

I had always assumed that since I used a towel after washing my hands or body, that the towel stayed pretty clean.  I was not thinking about the fact that crazy amounts of bacteria live on your skin all the time – even after you’ve just soaped up in the shower or scrubbed your hands.  As the Time article states, this is because most people do not thoroughly scrub their hands every time. So, when you dry your body and hands, you transfer the bacteria onto the towel.  Where the bacteria can multiply, because towels stay moist for a while.  Not to mention, most towels are kept in bathrooms/near toilets, so every time you flush the toilet, bacteria and microorganisms spread onto pretty much all surfaces.  Ok, that is graphic enough for this post.  Sorry.  I hope you weren’t eating while reading this.

Anyway.  Towels become pretty gross, pretty quickly.  I believe staying healthy helps one to be “green” and frugal.  Seriously, I struggle with non-(synthetic) cehmical options for treating ailments, and I go though way too many tissues when I get sick!  So I needed a good, environmentally friendly way to clean my towels.

How to clean

First, I always wash towels separately from clothing, because I clean them differently than regular clothes.  My post with the laundry detergent recipe talks about how I wash clothes.   

A microbiologist interviewed for the Time article recommends washing with hot water and oxygenated bleach.  Which most people know as the active ingredient in Oxy Clean. 

Oxygen Bleach

Oxygenated bleach can be liquid or powder.  Liquid has a shelf life of only a few months, or less.  Powdered is more stable, with a shelf life of a couple years,  So I decided to use powdered form.  Note that, when oxygenated bleach breaks down, the resultant products are quite safe: liquid becomes oxygen and water, powdered becomes oxygen and natural soda ash (also known as washing soda, or sodium carbonate).  So there is no danger to the break down, but the product becomes ineffective at cleaning the way that oxygen bleach cleans

OxiClean Baby & LA’s

I searched the Environmental Working Group Consumer Guide for cleaning to find a healthy and safe oxygenated bleach.  I found two that have only two ingredients: sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate (also called sodium percarbonate) (the ingredient that releases oxygen when in contact with water), and sodium carbonate (washing soda, or soda ash).  These two are OxiClean Baby and LA’s Totally Awesome Oxygen Base Cleaner.  However, I located some of LA’s Totally Awesome Oxygen Base Cleaner, and it definitely has more than 2 ingredients.  It has fragrance.  I contacted the manufacturer and they sent me the Material Safety Data Sheet.  The cleaner contains a 3rd ingredient: Ethoxylated Alcohol.  Which has an EWG rating of C

OxiClean Baby & LA's Totally Awesome Oxygen Base Cleaner
OxiClean Baby & LA’s Totally Awesome. Note that LA’s is an off-white rather than bright white color, and has colored particles. OxiClean Baby is pure bright white.

My choice of oxygen bleach is:

Sodium percarbonate & sodium carbonate

Additionally, you can purchase sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate/sodium percarbonate by itself and sodium carbonate (Super Washing Soda) by itself.  The reason that oxygen cleaners contain sodium carbonate is that it makes the water alkaline (basic), which helps the sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate (and washing soaps) clean.  According to the MSDS that I found for OxiClean Baby, it’s 50-60% Sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate, and 40-50% sodium carbonate.  If you’re mixing your own, roughly half sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate and half sodium carbonate should work well.

I currently use OxiClean Baby because it was the only EWG A rated oxygen cleaner that I came across and was able to verify ingredients with the manufacturer.  From here on, when I reference “oxiclean,” I am referring to OxiClean Baby or simply sodium percarbonate mixed with sodium carbonate.

OxiClean Baby
OxiClean Baby. The provided scoop is filled halfway, containing about 60 grams.

OxiClean Baby package, front

OxiClean Baby package, back

How to wash with oxygen bleach

Per guidance from the scientists in the Time article, I wash towels with hot water and oxygenated bleach, and I let the towels soak in the hot water with detergent and oxygen bleach for at least 1 hour or overnight.  If I had a washing machine that allowed soaking, I would scoop OxiClean to about half full (between the 2nd or 3rd line – per the package instructions) into the washer, pour 2-3 Tbsp of my liquid laundry detergent into the washer, and fill with hot water.  Once the washer was partly filled, I would add towels, allow to finish filling, then let soak for at least 1 hour or overnight.

instructions for washing towels overlaid on photo of towels in washing machine

Soaking

But, my Maytag Ecoconserve washer does not allow you to soak anything in it.  In fact, if you try to trick it by letting it fill, then “pause” the cycle, after about 15 minutes the washer automatically drains.  And there is no way to stop it.  I’m not going to lie.  I felt really guilty for wasting 26 gallons of water the day that I discovered this.  I stood there watching the water drain.  Trying, and failing, to figure out a way to stop it.  Sometimes I really hate this new “smart” technology.  Anyone want to trade me their old reliable washer for my shiny new “smart” one?  I digress.  Sorry.

soaking towels

So, with my washer that does not let me soak, I either just run the cycle immediately and the towels “soak” about 20-30 minutes during the full and wash cycle, or I soak outside my washer.  Usually I do the latter, using a big plastic tote into which I dissolve the OxiClean in water, add towels, cover with water, and let soak.  I then put detergent in my washer, load the towels into the washer, and machine wash my towels.

washing towels

Drying towels

The Time article recommends high heat drying as an additional method for killing bacteria and pathogens.  I elect for a compromise between the energy usage of high heat setting on a washing machine and the very environmentally friendly method of air drying.  I hang towels to dry, then  tumble on a medium heat setting (which to me feels very hot) for about 5 minutes.  Based on USDA guidelines for cooking food to high enough temperatures to kill bacteria then letting “rest” 2-3 minutes, I think my 5 minutes in the dryer is good enough for my purposes. 

towels air drying
towels air drying

How often to clean

The microbiologist interviewed for the Time article recommends washing kitchen and bathroom towels after 2 days of use, especially if there are young children in the house.  I recommend that you follow the guidance of these professionals.  

But, in case you’re wondering, here’s what I do.  Since I currently live in a household with only (mostly) responsible adults, I stretch it a bit.  First, I wash my hands thoroughly to remove as many bacteria and microorganisms as possible.  My kitchen and bath towels go in the laundry every 3 days.  My hand towels in the bathroom get used for 2-3 days, then get turned around.  Basically, when I dry my hands, I only use the part of the towel on the side of the towel bar nearest to me.  The back half of the towel barely gets wet.  So I guess (I need a good way to check this! I smell science experiment…) that the back half of the towel stays pretty clean, so that flipping it around gives me a mostly “new,” clean towel.  Then after another 2-3 days, the hand towels go in the laundry.  

COst

OxiClean Baby

OxyClean Baby costs about $10 for 3 pounds ($3.33/lb) on Amazon and at Walmart. 3 lbs = 1,362 grams. 1 scoop filled halfway = 60 grams.  1362grams/60grams/scoop=22.7 scoops (loads of towels) per package. $10/22.7loads=$0.44 per load. (50-60% Sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate, so each half-scoop has 30-36 grams)

LA’s Totally Awesome Oxygen Based Cleaner

I do not recommend LA’s Totally Awesome Oxygen Based Cleaner due to the ingredient list.  But, if you choose to use it, it’s a great price.  I found it at Dollar Tree for only $1 per pound. 1 scoop weighs approximately 30 grams.  16oz = 454 grams/30 grams/scoop=~15 scoops.  Per package instructions, 1 load of towels uses 2 scoops, so 1 package =~ 7.5 loads of towels.  $1.07/7.5 = $0.14 per load.

But, the active ingredient, sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate, is only 8-14%.  To get the same amount of sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate as a 1/2 scoop of OxiClean Baby, you’d need about 5 times as may scoops as the LA’s Totally Awesome package recommends. 2 scoops = 60 g x 5 = 300 g x 8% = 24 g to 300 g x 14% = 42 g.  $0.14×5 = $0.70, so OxiClean Baby is better cost per active ingredient sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate.)

Sodium Percarbonate plus Sodium Carbonate

Pure sodium percarbonate is $13.50 for 5 pounds ($2.70/lb).  Using 30 grams per load: 5 lbs = 2268 grams. 2268g/30g = 75.6 “servings” per package. $13.5/75.6 = $0.18

Sodium carbonate, or Super Washing Soda, is about $5 for 55oz at Walmart or a local grocery store. Using 30 grams per load: 55 oz = 1559 g. 1559g/30g = 52 “servings” per package. $5/52 = $0.10. 

Using 30 grams each sodium percarbonate and sodium carbonate, cost per load is $0.18+$0.10 = $0.28. 

Summary

Based on my calculations using amount of each ingredient per product, the lowest cost oxygen bleach cleaner is mixing your own sodium percarbonate and sodium carbonate, costing $0.28 per load of towels.  However, OxiClean Baby comes pre-mixed with its own scoop, and costs $0.44 per load of towels. 

 

Do you have any environmentally gently towel washing techniques?  Please share in the comments below!