100% Natural Ingredients · Handmade in Dublin
Ingredients Feb 2026
Myth Busters

5 Things You've Been Told About Soap That Are Completely Wrong.

Soap dries your skin. Fragrance is natural. Handmade bars fall apart. You can't scale without a factory. And cheaper is always better. We make a million bars a year — and every single one of those claims is nonsense.

John Larkin making soap
That's me in my house — 18 months into the journey.
As Featured In
The Irish Times RTÉ The Star The Sunday Business Post

I've been making soap for over five years. In that time I've heard the same handful of objections from people who haven't tried proper soap — over and over again. "Soap dries my skin." "Natural products don't last." "You can't really know what's in them." Let me explain why every one of those is wrong, and what's actually going on in the products you use every day.

The 5 Myths — At a Glance
1 "Soap dries your skin" — It's the ingredients used, that impact how your skin feels.
2 "Fragrance is natural" — "Fragrance" can hide up to 3,000+ chemicals. We use essential oils only.
3 "Handmade bars go mushy" — Uncured bars do. Ours cure for 3–4 weeks.
4 "A million bars = factory"35 people, 50 bars at a time, every one by hand.
5 "Cheaper is always better" — Essential oils cost 10× more than fragrance oils. You get what you pay for.
125,000+
Customers
28,000+
5-Star Reviews
1,000,000+
Bars Made
Myth #1
"Soap makes my skin feel dry and tight."
Busted ✕

This is the one I hear the most. And the frustrating thing is — it's half true. Most soap does leave your skin feeling dry. But the problem isn't soap itself. It's the ingredients inside the soap.

That tight, dry feeling isn't "clean." It's damage.

Commercial bars and shower gels are loaded with synthetic detergents — things like Sodium Lauryl Sulphate (SLS) — which strip the natural oils from your skin. They're the same compounds used in industrial degreasers. Your skin feels "squeaky clean" because its protective moisture barrier has been completely removed.

But here's what most people don't know: the ingredients you choose to make a soap determine how it treats your skin. Different oils bring different properties. Olive oil is rich in oleic acid and vitamin E — it's a natural emollient that conditions and softens while it cleans. Shea butter is packed with fatty acids that form a protective layer over the skin, locking moisture in. Coconut oil creates a rich, creamy lather. Castor oil draws moisture from the air to your skin (it's a natural humectant).

On top of this, real cold-processed soap produces its own glycerin during the chemical reaction. Glycerin is one of the best moisturisers known to science — and commercial soap manufacturers actually remove it from their bars so they can sell it separately to cosmetics companies. We don't. Every drop of glycerin stays in the bar where it belongs.

Commercial Soap
SLS & synthetic detergents
Glycerin removed & sold off
Strips natural oils
Leaves skin dry & tight
VS
The Black Stuff
Olive oil, shea, coconut, castor
Glycerin stays in the bar
Conditions while it cleans
Skin feels better after use
🫒
Olive Oil
Conditions & softens
🧈
Shea Butter
Locks in moisture
🥥
Coconut Oil
Rich, creamy lather
🌿
Castor Oil
Natural humectant
🌴
Palm Oil
Hardness & stability (sustainably sourced)
🫒Key takeaway: Soap doesn't dry your skin — cheap ingredients do. Olive oil, shea butter, and retained glycerin mean our bars condition while they clean.
What People Say About Their Skin
Facebook comment from Adrian Wood — severe eczema for 20 years, nearly recovered after 4 months
Facebook comment from John Whyte — dry flaky forehead gone after using eucalyptus soap, very pleased
Facebook comment from Kefren Mertens — eczema gone, loves the variety
Facebook comment from Jeffery Mahoney — bumpy chicken skin gone after first week, 8 months ago, won't use any other soap
Real comments from Facebook & Instagram — unedited
Myth #2
"It says 'natural fragrance' on the label — so it must be natural, right?"
Busted ✕

Here's something that surprised me when I started making soap: the word "fragrance" (or "parfum" on a label) is legally allowed to hide hundreds of undisclosed chemicals. It's treated as a trade secret. The company doesn't have to tell you what's in it.

3,059
materials listed by the International Fragrance Association that can hide behind the single word "fragrance"

Some of those materials include phthalates — chemicals originally designed to make plastics more flexible — which are used in fragrances to make scents last longer on your skin. Phthalates are classified as endocrine disruptors, meaning they can interfere with your body's hormonal system. They've been linked to reproductive health concerns, allergic reactions, and skin sensitivities. And you'd never know they were there, because the label just says "fragrance."

There's no legal definition of "natural" when it comes to fragrance. It's a marketing term, not a regulated one.

We chose a different path entirely. We don't use fragrance. We don't use parfum. Instead, we blend our scent profiles from pure essential oils — actual plant extracts. Pine from Scots pine trees. Cedarwood. Spearmint. Basil. Orange. Black pepper. Every oil we use is listed individually on the label. Nothing hidden, nothing vague, nothing synthetic.

The result is a different kind of scent. Not the aggressive, locker-room "Sport Blast" you get from synthetic fragrance. More like walking into a room where something smells incredible but you can't quite place it — warm, earthy, grounding. That's what real essential oils do. It takes longer and costs more, but we believe you deserve to know exactly what's touching your skin.

🚫Key takeaway: "Fragrance" on a label can hide thousands of undisclosed chemicals including phthalates. We use pure essential oils only — every ingredient listed, nothing hidden.

Curious? Our bundles are the easiest way to try a range of scent profiles.

Explore Bundles →
Myth #3
"Handmade soap goes mushy and falls apart in the shower."
Busted ✕

This one's fair. A lot of handmade soap does disintegrate quickly. But there's a specific reason for that — and it comes down to a step that most soap makers skip.

To make soap, you need lye (sodium hydroxide). Lye comes as a dry powder, and to use it, you dissolve it in liquid — usually distilled water, but sometimes something more interesting (we use Guinness in some of ours, and tea in others). This liquid is essential for the chemical reaction that turns oils into soap. But here's the catch: the same water that creates the soap also weakens it. After all, how do you use up a bar of soap? You add water.

The same water that creates the soap also destroys it. That's why curing matters.

After we cut our bars, they go into our cure room for 3–4 weeks. During that time, the excess water slowly evaporates from the bar. As it does, the soap molecules rearrange themselves into a tighter crystalline structure. The result is a harder, denser bar that lasts dramatically longer in the shower — not the mushy lump you'd get from an uncured bar.

A properly cured bar also lathers better, feels smoother on the skin, and is milder because any remaining traces of lye have fully completed their reaction with the oils. It's a better product in every single way.

21+ showers
average lifespan of a cured Black Stuff bar with daily use

Most soap companies skip this step. It's expensive — you need dedicated space, airflow, and you're sitting on stock for weeks before you can sell it. It's also counterintuitive: a bar that lasts longer means the customer buys less often. But we'd rather make something good than something that runs out fast. Every bar we sell has been cured for a minimum of three weeks before it leaves our workshop.

Key takeaway: Our bars cure for 3–4 weeks so excess water evaporates and the crystalline structure hardens. Result: a bar that lasts 21+ showers — not a mushy mess.
What People Say About How Long They Last
Facebook comment from Marcus Engström — still on first bar months later
Facebook comment from Andy Fisher — 3 bars on rotation for 6 months
Facebook comment from Craig O'Connell — bar longevity vs Dr. Squatch
Facebook comment from Sebastian Garrad — comparing to Dr. Squatch
Real comments from Facebook & Instagram — unedited
Myth #4
"If you're making a million bars a year, you must be using a factory by now."
Busted ✕

We made over a million bars last year. Every single one was made by hand, 50 at a time.

I started The Black Stuff alone in my kitchen during Covid. For the first two years, I made every product we sold in my house. It was just me — mixing oils, pouring moulds, cutting bars, labelling them, posting them. It was brilliant and exhausting in equal measure.

Today we have 35 people in our workshop in Sandyford, Dublin. We haven't automated. We haven't outsourced. We haven't bought a single machine that replaces a person. Instead, we've grown by hiring, training, and passing on our soapmaking techniques to a team that cares about the craft as much as I do.

35
people handmaking our products
50
bars per batch — still

Our approach to scaling is simple: we grow by increasing employment, not by increasing automation. Every bar of The Black Stuff is cold-processed, hand-poured, hand-cut, and hand-labelled. When you open one, a person made that — not a machine. That's a commitment we've made and we're sticking to it.

We ship from Dublin for Ireland and Europe, from London for the UK, from Tennessee for the US, and from Toronto for Canada. Over a million bars a year, 50 at a time, made by real people who know what they're doing.

🖐️Key takeaway: We scale by hiring people, not buying machines. 35 people, 4 warehouses, 1 million+ bars a year — still 50 at a time.
The Black Stuff community
The Black Stuff has built a private Facebook community of 13,000+ members who share their favourites and swap recommendations.
Myth #5
"There are cheaper options out there — why would I pay more?"
Busted ✕

You're right — there are lots of cheaper alternatives. And that's completely fine. But cheap isn't what we do, and we think it's worth explaining why.

Essential oils cost roughly 10 times more than synthetic fragrance oils. That's just one ingredient.

We could use fragrance oils like most soap companies. We could swap out olive oil and shea butter for cheaper fillers. We could skip the 3–4 week cure and ship bars the day after they're made. We could automate production, reduce our headcount, and bring the price down. Every one of those decisions would make our soap cheaper. Every one of them would also make it worse.

Instead, we use the best natural ingredients we can find. We cure every bar properly. We employ 35 people and pay them a decent living wage. We make everything by hand, 50 at a time, in a workshop — not a factory. None of that is cheap to do, and we don't pretend otherwise.

Where Cheap Soaps Cut Corners
Synthetic fragrance oils
Cheap filler oils & detergents
No cure time (ship immediately)
Factory automation
VS
What You're Paying For Here
Pure essential oils (10× the cost)
Olive oil, shea butter, coconut oil
3–4 week cure for longer-lasting bars
35 people paid a living wage

The truth is, when you factor in how long a properly made bar lasts versus a cheap one that disintegrates in a week, the cost per shower is often comparable — or even lower. But beyond the maths, it comes down to what you're comfortable putting on your skin every day, and the kind of business you want to support.

We're not the cheapest, and that's by design. Every euro goes into better ingredients, better wages, and better products. Sometimes you really do get what you pay for.

— John Larkin
💰Key takeaway: Cheap soap cuts corners on ingredients, curing, and people. We invest in all three — and because our bars last longer, the cost per shower is often comparable.

See the difference for yourself — bundles save 40%+ vs buying individually.

Explore Bundles →
What People Are Saying
Facebook comment from Cody Gore — better than Dr. Squatch
Facebook comment from Aaron Brock — researched on Reddit, placing an order
Facebook comment from Victor Ferruolo — The Doctor is too commercial
Facebook comment — Maria Daniella Jensen recommends for sensitive skin
Real comments from Facebook & Instagram — unedited
John Larkin

If you've made it this far, you clearly care about what you put on your skin — and I respect that. If you're even a little curious about what proper soap actually feels like, grab a bundle and see for yourself. Worst case, you don't love a scent and we replace it free. Best case, you never go back to shower gel.

Cheers,

John Larkin
Founder & Chief Soap Maker, The Black Stuff 🧼🍺

Ready to Feel the Difference?

Our bundles are the easiest way to try a range of soaps. Pick a set, and if you don't love a scent we'll replace it — no questions asked.

🫒
100% Natural Ingredients
Olive oil, shea butter, essential oils — nothing synthetic
🖐️
Handmade, 50 at a Time
Cold-processed, hand-cut & cured for 3–4 weeks
✌️
First Scent Guarantee
Don't love a scent? We'll swap it free
🔒 Secure Checkout
🇮🇪 Handmade in Dublin, Ireland
🌿 100% Natural Ingredients
🚫 No 'Fragrance' or Phthalates
✌️ First Scent Guarantee
Still Not Sure? Hear It From Them
Facebook comment from Gary Day — gym-tested the deodorant
Facebook comment from John Richard Norton — fantastic and worth every penny, especially with the offers
Facebook comment from Richard Marc Kenny — deodorant is even better
Facebook comment from David Myhowycz (Top fan) — 5 variations, kids have favourites, great for sensitive skin. Chelle: so good I use my husbands
Real comments from Facebook & Instagram — unedited
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the main ingredients? +
Our base is olive oil, shea butter, coconut oil, castor oil, and sustainably sourced palm oil. We add natural exfoliants like activated charcoal, wild Irish seaweed, and volcanic pumice depending on the bar. Every scent comes from pure essential oils — no synthetic fragrance.
Do you use any 'fragrance' or 'parfum'? +
No. We never use fragrance or parfum. All our scent profiles are blended in-house from pure essential oils. Every ingredient is listed individually on the label — nothing hidden behind vague terms.
How long does a bar last? +
Each bar lasts 21+ showers with daily use. Our bars are cold-processed and cured for 3–4 weeks, which makes them much harder and longer-lasting than most handmade soaps.
What if I don't like a scent? +
That's what the First Scent Guarantee is for. Let us know and we'll replace it with something else free of charge. No hassle, no returns needed.
Is the palm oil sustainably sourced? +
Yes. We only use RSPO-certified sustainably sourced palm oil. Palm oil contributes to bar hardness and stability, and we believe it's possible to use it responsibly.
Why is it more expensive than other soaps? +
Essential oils cost roughly 10× more than synthetic fragrance oils. Add in olive oil, shea butter, a 3–4 week cure, and 35 people paid a living wage — and the cost reflects genuine quality. When you factor in how long each bar lasts, the cost per shower is often comparable to cheaper alternatives.
Where does it ship from? +
We keep stock in Ireland, the UK, USA and Canada. Your order ships from the closest warehouse.
Is this just for men? +
Not at all. Our soaps are used by everyone — the essential oil scents are earthy and natural, not gendered. About 40% of our orders are bought by women (either for themselves or as gifts).
Advertorial Disclosure: This page is an advertisement for The Black Stuff. All customer reviews are from verified buyers. Results may vary.
Explore Bundles & Save 40%
Handmade in Dublin · 100% Natural · First Scent Guarantee