That ‘all-natural’ claim on the bottle? It’s doing a lot of heavy lifting.
This isn’t a deodorant. It’s an antiperspirant in disguise — and that’s the whole greenwashing game right there.
A clear roll-on, about $8. The promise of a “pure mineral salt” formula sold me after my last natural stick failed spectacularly.
Potassium Alum
The main mineral salt — it’s a rock.
No Aluminum Chlorohydrate
Their big marketing point vs. conventional antiperspirants.
Fragrance-Free
Just a faint, clean, mineral-water scent.
Photo: Ramez E. Nassif / Unsplash
Potassium alum is still an aluminum salt. It forms a barrier on your skin to block sweat. The ‘natural’ label is technically true — it’s a mined mineral — but the function is identical to traditional antiperspirants.
- Potassium Alum: The sweat-blocking mineral salt
- Purified Water: The vehicle
- Bisabolol: Soothing agent from chamomile
- Glycerin: Humectant to prevent drying
Photo: Hoi An and Da Nang Photographer / Unsplash
Applies wet — like cool, slick water. Dries in under a minute to a faint, tight film. Zero residue on black tees.
By week two, I noticed a weird chalky buildup in my pits. Had to exfoliate. The ‘natural’ barrier was a little too good.
Photo: deanna alys / Unsplash
Zero sweat stains. Seriously. But after a long day, a faint, musty *body* odor — not a sharp BO — would sometimes appear. It controls wetness, not all microbial activity.
Photo: Towfiqu barbhuiya / Unsplash
It’s clean in ingredients, but the ‘natural’ messaging is a semantic shield. A very effective, no-frills antiperspirant.