Finally, here are a couple pictures.
Sorry about the delay. Just couldn't do it before now. I have got a few pictures of finshed things, but I had no real inclination to wrestle "Hello" to get them into entries.
But, a recent finished project had me a bit more excited than usual, so . . .
The pictures are nothing special. Just a couple photos of green and cream yarn - one, a shot of a nice lace pattern.
But a bit in the future, after I've written it up, I'll explain the thing I'm excited about. The problem is explaining it without letting loose what is knitted. The object is a future Christmas present, so I'd like to keep it a teeny bit of a secret.
By the way, I thought of sharing the results of a non-knitted experiment.
To understand it, you need to know a couple things; one, I don't have a bath - just a shower. - so, I have quite a selection of shower gels to wash with.
The other thing is that usually, in cold weather, or when I've been washing my hands a lot, my hands go dry and I have to put on hand creme (my favourite being Vaseline's Intensive Care - yellow bottle). Now, if I'm washing my hands a lot, putting on hand creme is a bit of a waste. so, the skin on my hands tends to crack and bleed, especially around the knuckles. It takes a few days for that to heal.
Then some time passed. . . So here I was in the bathroom, with this almost empty pump bottle of liquid hand soap, all these shower gel bottles with tiny amounts in them and the idea hit me - why not use shower gel like liquid hand soap? It's concentrated, so you don't need to use a great deal (not a full push on the pump like you would for regular liquid hand soap) some shower gels come in moisturising formulas - which I have some of - and you'd be saving money.
So I tried it.
I decanted all of those little leftover bits of shower gel into the liquid soap container. It made for an interesting smell, but not too bad (I had a small amount of a lemon gel that was a one-off and it made the overall scent slightly weird). There were moisturising elements to some of them, not to mention some of shower gels I had contained essential oils, so there was my anti-bacterial cover.
(most, if not all essential oils have anti-bacterial properties. Especially lavender, patchouli, tea tree, geranium and sandalwood).
I washed my hands with the resulting dark amber-ish goo for about a week.
My skin was lovely. The next week, I had a day where I was washing my hands every 15 minutes. My hands were fine. In the last 6 months of doing this, I've only had to use my hand creme once and that was when I came back from being at a friends for a few days.
My hands are soft and lovely. Scented nicely, too. No cracking skin, my nails are supple, I'm saving money on liquid hand soap and, best of all, I don't have all these mostly empty bottles of shower gel cluttering up my bathroom.
Try it for yourself.
Until then. . .
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