Also, some suppliers will list their ingredients like this: Olea Europaea (Olive) Oil (Grade A Extra Virgin), Elaeis Guineensis (Palm) Oil, Cocos Nucifera (Coconut) Oil, Carthamus Tinctorius (Safflower) Seed Oil, Glycerin (Kosher of vegetable origin), Purified Water, Sodium Hydroxide (saponifying agent), Sorbitol (moisturizer), Sorbitan oleate (emulsifier), Soy bean protein (conditioner), Titanium Dioxide (mineral whitener used in opaque soaps)
When you go to sell your soap, you need to change the ingredient list. You would have to take out the "Grade A Extra Virgin", "Kosher of vegetable origin", "saponifying agent", "moisturizer", "emulsifier", "conditioner", "mineral whitener in opaque soaps". Now if you want to explain on your site or in a pamphlet or something what those ingredients do, that's fine. But you can't put them on your ingredient labels.
Here's another example of another product that you would need to change the way the ingredients are listed: coconut oil, bees wax, organic shea butter, organic cocoa butter, tocopherol (vitamin e)
With this one you'd have to take out "organic" & "vitamin e". On your website if you want to say that you use organic ingredients when you can, that's fine. But unless your products have been certified to be organic, you can't put it on your labels.
_________________ Genny
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