You know I'm tight when ...
... you see this hanging in the shower!
Soap. In an onion bag! But there's a reason for this macabre pairing. Read on !
As we all know, soap eventually wears down to a small stub which slips out of your hand when you try to use it. Well, I try to use them, maybe you don't! Maybe I'm the only tight person in the room!
But I cannot bear to see these little stubs of soap being thrown away so our household collects I collect them.
The Photographer's method is to place the little piece on top the new bar of soap. It's a good idea but when wet and in action, this little soap pile tor can fall apart.
Now, do you remember back in the 50s/60s, when we used to collect the small pieces remaining from a bar of soap and pop them into a little bag made of sponge and sealed with blanket stitch?
I certainly do.
I googled to see if I could find a shot to describe this better. I found nothing but did discover that there are quite a few like-minded bods out in the blogosphere, because I found lots of pics such as
and
and
even this pretty complicated piece of kit!
Research done, let's return to my money and planet saving efforts.
Tired of the soap avalanches, I started collecting them in a cut-down onion bag. I thought this was a good idea as this rough little netted bundle creates an exfoliant treatment, which I started giving myself on a regular basis when I remember. But it is a tad harsh on the skin!
So I then came up with a better solution. I started collecting the soap-stubs in a little exfoliant mitt to give myself a gentler exfoliation. This is all a work in progress. I think my next step is to knit a little draw-string bag to collect and use my stubs.
More and more of us move to hand and shower washes, leaving the humble bar of soap as but a memory, but it is still alive and relic-like in the less modern household. Like Chez Pout!
The Photographer still likes soap in the shower and I have to say that I use it a few times a week too, like on exfoliation days!
What do you do with your soap stubs?
Or is it not an issue because you are a soapbar-free household?
A la perchoine.