BATH SOAK || FAT AND THE MOON
Choose from three different blends...
| SELF CARE | Make your Self Care bath a ritual offering to you. To support those parts that emerge and thrive when you take care of yourself, scoop 2-3 Tablespoons into each bath. Soak till pruned.
Ingredients: arrowroot starch*, rhassoul clay, honey powder* (maltodextrin* & honey*), essential oils of clary sage* and lavender*
| SOOTHE | For those who've got, itchy, inflamed skin situations soak yourself in some soothe. Use 2-3 heaping Tablespoons per bath, 1-2 for the babes and kiddos. Chills the twinge from rashes, eczema and bug bites. To make a soothing paste, mix 2 tablespoons of Soothe with a little water until you achievenice spreadable consistency.
Ingredients: oats*, arrowroot starch*, kaolin clay, irish moss*, rose geranium essential oil*
| UNDER THE WEATHER | Soak for the sicky. Under the weather soothes the cold and flu induced sore bod with mustard and the stellar combo of eucalyptus, rosemary and clove essential oils, warming and opening. Use 3+ heaping tablespoons per bath, 1-2 for babes and kiddos.
Ingredients: arrowroot starch*, mustard seed*, honey powder* (maltodextrin* & honey*) kaolin clay, essential oils of eucalyptus*, rosemary* and clove*
6oz. envelope pouch
|| ABOUT FAT & THE MOON ||
Continuing a family legacy of herbalists and natural healers, Fat and the Moon founder Rachel Budde has built her company around providing handcrafted, herbal body care products to those seeking a natural alternative to chemical-filled products. Like a witch over a cauldron, Budde experiments with age-old ingredients and recipes passed down from various healing traditions to craft innovative and simple products that are good for the body and the earth. Fat and the Moon started as an alternative to the toxic, mass production body care industry aiming to provide nourishing ingredients and nourishing messages of self love, and self care.
And if you were wondering why 'Fat and the Moon'....
Fat as the first word in the name of my business has gotten me in some interesting discussions. People ask me about the name all the time because they can hardly believe I would use a word that has such negative connotations, especially when it is used within ‘beauty care’.
In part, I use the word ‘fat’ to be provocative; I don’t believe fat is a dirty word. But most of the fat in Fat and the Moon comes from my love of the material- oil is the medium of external herbal medicine. Fat in the form of oil, is the gift of the seed. Fat, both in plants and animals, is where energy is stored. The richness we taste in food, and the suppleness we feel on our skin after a good slather of bath oil, is our bodies recognition of and pleasure in that vital energy. Oil from plants, in and of itself, is medicinal. I feel honored as a medicine maker to indulge in the play of fat and herbs, especially under the influence of the moon.