
by jhunie
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I furnish the wash basin with personal toiletries. And the sink can’t be complete without hand soap. At home I feel at peace only when my hands are clean. Handwashing with soap and water is a practice that sometimes compromises our skin-conscious selves (down the drain goes my week’s manicure). Getting scaly hands is one thing that stands in the way. In addition to my top concerns, there are other issues that shake the Radox clean and protect handwash out from its place.
The thing about this handwash is its non-soapy lather. The handwash lathers, alright. It’s just not as rich and foamy as domestic hand soaps. The liquid struck me with confusion when I squirted some out of the bottle. I had to ask my mom if someone diluted the damn thing. It turns out…it is what it is. It’s so thinned out
like a concentrated dishwashing soap diminished 3 or more times in tap water. It is unbelievably watered-down for a hand soap, literally. The first pump yielded very few bubbles to clean both hands. Ultimately I followed it up with another, and almost always two pumps delivered a desirable lather, but still considerably less when pitted against other foaming hand soaps. I’m not optimistic this would last me for a while on account of the lather.
Beyond the surface, the liquid soap, as fitting as that sounds, is strikingly mediocre. My point being that the hand soap is strikingly different in consistency but a plain soap nonetheless. It makes my hands clean, of course, and it rinses easily. My hands get nothing more than a good cleanse, although I feel a tad squeaky after consistent use. There’s no moisturizing effect to speak of. I’m pleased to say ...