Mirto di Sardegna v. (Saponificio Varesino) lime, lavender, myrtle, oak moss, vetiver
Saponificio Varesino's approach to soap making is the polar opposite of Martin de Candre's. While the French soap cooker seeks for bare simplicity and clear, clean scents, their Italian counterpart revels in complex arrays of ingredients and rich, complicated fragrances. I have to admit I love them both, but there's something especially playful and attractive about Saponificio Varesino's soaps. These are baroque masterpieces, a little over the top, but intriguing all the same. Drawing on unexpected additions from as far afield as the deserts of Mexico, the high slopes of the Alps, the arctic tundra, and the steaming islands of the Pacific, no two Saponificio Varesino soaps are exactly alike. Some soaps contain as many as 35 ingredients. With a list that long, they easily produce a thick, luxurious lather.
Saponificio Varesino's approach to soap making is the polar opposite of Martin de Candre's. While the French soap cooker seeks for bare simplicity and clear, clean scents, their Italian counterpart revels in complex arrays of ingredients and rich, complicated fragrances. I have to admit I love them both, but there's something especially playful and attractive about Saponificio Varesino's soaps. These are baroque masterpieces, a little over the top, but intriguing all the same. Drawing on unexpected additions from as far afield as the deserts of Mexico, the high slopes of the Alps, the arctic tundra, and the steaming islands of the Pacific, no two Saponificio Varesino soaps are exactly alike. Some soaps contain as many as 35 ingredients. With a list that long, they easily produce a thick, luxurious lather.
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