What you need: Ivory Soap (but feel free to test other soap you have too - watch the end!) Microwave How To: Microwave your soap on a microwave-safe plate for 1-2 minutes Be careful - it'll be a little warm once you're done!
Two things; I wonder if the other bar of soap will float now , and second did you see how nice that microwaved ivory bar soap flaked, I now have ivory soap flakes I'm so happy💕
sounded like someone was walking up and down stairs or stomping around above you for a lot of the video. Maybe it's the mic itself, not sure. I probably wouldn't have noticed if I didn't have my headphones on but I kept picking up a thumping noise with them on. It's really present around 3:35.
Great video!! I think most of the elements are now in the mix!! Adding research/pictures/video content/music all really brings it to life!! I hope all is well :)
wouldnt you be fun on a spaceship - well i was going with the self cleaning bathroom - well it looks good for clothing just might want to burn a incent - uv light can only do so much - if you was on space station right now you would smell so bad - they dont clean their clothing or account for farts - you got to stay out of corners where thing gather - it only look like a air pocket - more like a peta pocket
@@twissystammer9975 What has no odor? Ivory bar soap does have an odor/scent. It's light and for most people non-objectionable, but there is an added fragrance, just like the ingredients list indicates: "Sodium Tallowate And/Or Sodium Palmate, Water, Sodium Cocoate And/Or Sodium Palm Kernelate, Glycerin, Sodium Chloride, *Fragrance* , Coconut Acid, Palm Kernel Acid, Tallow Acid, Palm Acid, Tetrasodium Edta." It looks complicated, but Ivory really is almost pure, old-fashioned lye soap (contains no modern industrial detergents, contrary to the claims of many people online). The sodium something-ate ingredients are all just different fats (tallow is animal fat, if it matters--the most traditional lye soap ingredient, historically) and fruit/vegetable oils mixed with lye to form soap, water is self-explanatory, glycerin is a byproduct of the soap-making process and is good for your skin (a natural moisturizer), sodium chloride is table salt that is added to harden the soap into bar form (and it rinses right off), the acids are just what's left over from making sure there is slightly less lye than oils (lye by itself is dangerous, while these acids are minute in quantity and safe, so all the lye must be reacted), and tetrasodium EDTA is added to help make the soap more effective in hard water. That last ingredient is the only artificial one besides the fragrance, and could be slightly unhealthy (like the fragrance). But there is an added fragrance despite Ivory being simple, almost pure soap.