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Bath Bombs: Getting the Most Out of Your Bath and Alternative Ways to Bring the Bath Bomb Experience to the Rest of Your Life: DIY Projects
Bath Bombs: Getting the Most Out of Your Bath and Alternative Ways to Bring the Bath Bomb Experience to the Rest of Your Life: DIY Projects
Bath Bombs: Getting the Most Out of Your Bath and Alternative Ways to Bring the Bath Bomb Experience to the Rest of Your Life: DIY Projects
Ebook38 pages23 minutes

Bath Bombs: Getting the Most Out of Your Bath and Alternative Ways to Bring the Bath Bomb Experience to the Rest of Your Life: DIY Projects

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The magic of bath bombs has been spreading around the globe at an astronomical rate. It has become one of the most popular pass times we can have where we can indulge in some of life’s little luxuries. Still, bath bombs on a regular basis can be quite expensive and you’re not always guaranteed you’ll get the exact type of bomb you need. When you know how to create them and make them for yourself, you’ll not only be able to reap the benefits from the aromatic therapy these bombs create but you’ll be sure that you’re getting exactly what you need out of your homemade bombs.

To ensure that you’re truly getting the most out of your at home spa-treatments at an affordable price, you need to read this book. In these pages you’ll learn:

Inside You Will Learn:

  • The Health Benefits of Bath Bombs
  • Additional Ways to Use Your Homemade Bath Bombs
  • How to Adapt a Bath Bomb Recipe so it’s Safer for Children
  • Why They are so Cool
  • And Much More

Once you’ve mastered the simple techniques on how to make the most out of your bath bomb, you won’t ever want to consider buying a store-made bath bomb ever again.

Don’t Delay. Download This Book Now.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherGuava Books
Release dateFeb 1, 2017
ISBN9781386054962
Bath Bombs: Getting the Most Out of Your Bath and Alternative Ways to Bring the Bath Bomb Experience to the Rest of Your Life: DIY Projects

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    Bath Bombs - Yvonne Olson

    Introduction

    Not too long ago, archeologists were excavating the region where ancient Babylon once stood in all of its glory, and they unearthed a practice that we still pride ourselves on today. It appears that this ancient civilization became the first people to master the craft of making soap. Their recipe was relatively simple, take the fat of the animals they slaughtered, mix it with the ashes from their fires, boil it all together and voila! The first laundry soap was made. It was used to clean many of their textiles, wool, cotton, and other fabrics of the time.

    Now this practice was developed over 5000 years ago around 2800 BC. Later the Egyptians picked up the practice (1550 BC) with a little adjustment. The animal fats were mixed with vegetable oils, and alkaline salts to create a variation on the Babylonian practice.

    The historian, Pliny, the Elder, wrote of the Phoenicians use of goat tallow (fat) with the ashes of a wood fire around 600 BC. Afterwards, the Romans, Greeks, and other great civilizations discovered that mixing a little fat with a few choice ingredients (oils, salts, herbs, etc.) was a great way to keep clothes and the house clean.

    However, even through all those years, soap was not considered something you would use for personal hygiene. That was something that would not happen until many years later. As a matter of fact, using soap was something that was reserved for the elite of those civilizations. There was a very exclusive group of soap makers who were often granted a high level of respect; soap was a very expensive commodity that most people could not afford.

    It wasn’t until 1792 that a Frenchman by the name of LeBlanc discovered a way to make soap for far less money so that the masses could get a chance at using the precious bars. By the early 1800s, with the discovery of glycerin, soap entered

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