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cleaning

30th April 2008

The handy dandy toxic list (or: showing my granola crunching in list form)

While at the Green Living Show this weekend, I picked up several cards that list cosmetic and personal care ingredients in big and little kid products to avoid. These are synthetics that are potentially harmful — especially to vulnerable, developing babies.

(For the record, I’m SO not saying these ARE harmful or cause cancer or make your arms fall off or or will kill us all tomorrow. They are thought to be harsh or not environmentally-friendly or come from nonrenewable resources. And yes, this information comes from companies that sell naturally-based products with their own agendas. Which is why I’m linking to Wikipedia or Google for definitions, where you can find all sorts of links on your own.)

While I knew of some of these (parabens and phthalates) I thought you might like to see what other things to look for on an ingredient list. As with food, if you can’t pronounce it, it’s probably not good for you…

  • sodium lauryl/laureth sulfate — a cleansing agent that creates foam and suds (which is why many natural products are not near as “soapy” as we’re used to)
  • parabens — preservatives used in cosmetics and pharmaceuticals. Controversial studies have linked it to cancer and increased estrogen.
  • phthalates — used in plastics to make them more elastic, and found in everything from shower curtains to sex toys to nail polish and perfume and iPods. Controversial studies have linked it to hormonal imbalances (especially in fetuses) and allergies.
  • petrolatum — a greasy, film-building skin protector widely used in cosmetics. Byproduct of petroleum (duh).
  • phenylenediamine (PPD) — used in hair and textile dyes, printer ink and photographic products. A known allergen.
  • coal-tar colours (FD&C or D&C) — synthetic food and cosmetic colour dye.
  • diethanolamine (DEA) — used to create a creamy texture and foaming action. Linked to cancer, decreased brain development and miscarriages.
  • dimethicone — a silicone oil used in shampoo to make hair slippery and shiny.
  • formaldehyde — too. much. to. process.
  • phosphate — commonly added to dishwasher detergent to help soften water and boost cleaning power. Excessive amounts in our water can create excess algae.
  • oxybenzone — organic compound used in sunscreen and cosmetics as it absorbs UVA rays. A known carcinogen that penetrates the skin and creates free radicals (this one scares me, because I’ve been wearing sunscreen cream for years, and regularly slather it on Lucy. Need to look into it more and find alternatives.)

FYI, two of my favourite Durham retailers (who also happen to advertise, yes) carry wonderful natural baby bath products. Tamarra of Lollipops & Lizards (online) now carries the Little Twig line, and Shelby of Natural Earth Tones (Oshawa) has the All Things Jill line. Both are great priced (the higher cost of natural and organic products is always an impediment for people, myself included, which is why these are great).

President’s Choice had a HUGE booth at the show and was really promoting its Green products. We got a free, full-size sample of their floor cleaner and cleaning putty. Currently, we use the laundry soap, toilet paper and paper towels, and will switch to the dishwasher detergent when our stock is up. I love that these are so accessible and reasonably priced.

A company called Live Clean gave away tons of mini bottles of shampoo and conditioner to promote their eco-friendly body care line. Their stuff is 96% plant derived, and they gave out this neat bookmark that you can plant to make a wildflower garden (what clever, clever marketing).

This post is huge, so I’d better stop before your eyes roll back in your head from too much info or you click screaming away from the hippie-ness. Hope it all helps!

2 Comments

25th August 2007

I was almost too embarrassed to write this ’cause now you’ll know how I spent Saturday night

I’ve been slowly exhausting our harsh cleaners and replacing them with biodegradable, chemical-free stuff (such as the Method line). When we moved, we needed almost everything: bathroom cleaner, dish soap, wood polish etc.

It was there, in the aisle of our local Shoppers Drug Mart while looking for more Method, that it happened.

I found the best bathroom cleaner ever. Ever, ever, ever.

Shopper’s has a new line of biodegradable, non-toxic and phosphate-free cleaners called BioLife. So far there is a dish soap, all purpose cleaner and a tub and tile formula.

I’m not kidding: the tub and tile stuff leaves our bathrooms sparkling with hardly any scrubbing (yes, the bottle says to just spray and wipe, but I always scrub). I use it on sinks, the shower, tubs — even inside the toilet bowl. It works kick-ass incredible, far better than the Method bathroom cleaner or any bleachy/harsh product I’ve ever used.

It’s got a sweet pear scent that doesn’t burn your lungs off, and rinses clean. Best part (aside from non-killing-the-environment properties, worry-free baby bathing, oh and breathing): it’s only $4 for any 750 ml BioLife product.

(Note: we have soft water here, so I can’t comment on really tough, hard water soap scum like we had at the old place.)

Go get it. Not now, ’cause it’s Saturday night and you should have better things to do (shut up, we have company coming tomorrow…), but soon.

10 Comments

4th July 2007

Baby bath ban bah

bath.jpgSo often parents are held to account for over reacting and hyper safety-ing our kids.

But here’s an example of a government body doing the fear mongering for us: The Ontario coroner wants a Canada-wide ban on baby bath tubs and rings because of five (5!) infant deaths related to their use over an almost twenty (yes 20) year span.

Not for a second overlooking the tragedy of the deaths, how many parents do you know that use those bath seats? Every single parent I know. So chances are the vast majority of us use them. That’s hundreds of thousands (millions?) of parents across the country.

Is it me, or is that a little extreme?

7 Comments

1st March 2007

The right Method means less BURNING

I  hate cleaning the bathroom. I hate it almost as much as unloading the dishwasher.

One of the main reasons for bathroom distaste is the pain that comes with said cleaning. It doesn’t seem to matter which product I use – they all stink, and no matter how wide the window is open or high the fan is turned on, the fumes always make my eyes water and lungs burn. I imagine holes burning into me.

Read the rest of this entry »

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