Guest guest Posted March 19, 2004 Report Share Posted March 19, 2004 I apologize for misunderstanding the reference to " faux pas " .It appeared very soon after my initial post regarding not wanting to use " synthetic " additives in my products. The comment " I am through talking to anyone who wants products without chemicals... " felt as if it was directed at that previous email. If I was mistaken, then I apologize. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2004 Report Share Posted March 19, 2004 I apologize for misunderstanding the reference to " faux pas " .It appeared very soon after my initial post regarding not wanting to use " synthetic " additives in my products. The comment " I am through talking to anyone who wants products without chemicals... " felt as if it was directed at that previous email. If I was mistaken, then I apologize. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 20, 2004 Report Share Posted March 20, 2004 In a message dated 3/19/2004 4:31:38 PM Central Standard Time, moeim2@... writes: > The comment " I am through talking to anyone who wants products without > chemicals... " I took this comment as more of a marketing approach / understanding than an attack on your question ... see, I too will explain to people that my soaps are what others might call all natural, but there's no such thing - it's a market-hype lie. No-one picks olives, rubs them on the skin, and considers it castile soap! Olives are processed, the oil I choose is reprocessed for refinement .... if man-handling / processing separates natural from chemical, olive oil is chemical. Therefore, I rephrase to be accurate - most of my oils are whole oils rather than fractioned fatty acids, glycerine is of course retained, etc. but the lye and the making of the soap itself / production of the free glycerine is chemical. I don't think we should take high offense to a position so opposing to our initial intents. I was ademately anti-chemical based on internet home-craft hype, and came here to gain understanding and glean what I could to make my " natural " line compete-worthy. I've been profoundly humbled, and not with unkindness of any type but with objectivity and truth. I'm a " big girl, " and found I could handle it. How could I have expected to come into a " pro-chemical " group and presume they'd be as pro-natural as they truly are? It's caused me to re-word my representation of my " natural " products because truth is what I expect - I'll represent no less to my customers. We're adults. We're professionals. This list is like a virtual workplace meeting room and, with that behavioral protocol in mind, feelings also go through a learning curve while the intellect strives to learn and produce within our envisioned guidelines. With that perspective, we can appreciate how much all the types of ingredients have contributed - and make informed choices. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 20, 2004 Report Share Posted March 20, 2004 In a message dated 3/19/2004 4:31:38 PM Central Standard Time, moeim2@... writes: > The comment " I am through talking to anyone who wants products without > chemicals... " I took this comment as more of a marketing approach / understanding than an attack on your question ... see, I too will explain to people that my soaps are what others might call all natural, but there's no such thing - it's a market-hype lie. No-one picks olives, rubs them on the skin, and considers it castile soap! Olives are processed, the oil I choose is reprocessed for refinement .... if man-handling / processing separates natural from chemical, olive oil is chemical. Therefore, I rephrase to be accurate - most of my oils are whole oils rather than fractioned fatty acids, glycerine is of course retained, etc. but the lye and the making of the soap itself / production of the free glycerine is chemical. I don't think we should take high offense to a position so opposing to our initial intents. I was ademately anti-chemical based on internet home-craft hype, and came here to gain understanding and glean what I could to make my " natural " line compete-worthy. I've been profoundly humbled, and not with unkindness of any type but with objectivity and truth. I'm a " big girl, " and found I could handle it. How could I have expected to come into a " pro-chemical " group and presume they'd be as pro-natural as they truly are? It's caused me to re-word my representation of my " natural " products because truth is what I expect - I'll represent no less to my customers. We're adults. We're professionals. This list is like a virtual workplace meeting room and, with that behavioral protocol in mind, feelings also go through a learning curve while the intellect strives to learn and produce within our envisioned guidelines. With that perspective, we can appreciate how much all the types of ingredients have contributed - and make informed choices. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 20, 2004 Report Share Posted March 20, 2004 In a message dated 3/20/2004 9:05:31 AM Pacific Standard Time, katie36551@... writes: How could I have expected to come into a " pro-chemical " group and presume they'd be as pro-natural as they truly are? It's caused me to re-word my representation of my " natural " products because truth is what I expect - I'll represent no less to my customers. I agree with you ... it's hard to reevaluate previous modes of thought..but...I'm a fast learner! I also am totally honest with my customers as well.... maureen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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