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🌿 Stay fresh, stay natural — deodorant redefined.
MAGSOL Natural Deodorant is a premium aluminum- and baking soda-free formula powered by magnesium oxide and enriched with sweet almond oil and beeswax. Designed for sensitive skin, it offers long-lasting odor protection for up to 9 months, suitable for the whole family, and crafted in the USA with just four natural ingredients.
A**O
Softly Fragrant Orange Scent, Not Over Powering
Hello All,The Magsol brand of Magnesium Deodorant is a brand I've trusted for several years now for my armpits. This is the first time I've tried this orange-scented variety, however. The scent is very soft and not overpowering at all in terms of its citrus appeal.When I apply the product, there's no future concern of discomfort and sweating. I've never had an issue with staining my shirts around their underarms. The portion size states it lasts for a few months, although I often find it can last much longer, perhaps up to a full year if you're lucky.The only time I'm ever irritated is when I overdo it and apply too much deodorant product on my armpits. Then it comes off feeling pasty on my armpits. So, only one application, and you'll be fine and dandy with Magsol.
C**Y
Works all day long
I love this deodorant! It works very well all day long. And is clean of all the junk in most deodorants now days. I have multiple scents and will be buying more.
L**N
Smells like talcum powder of old
I've tried many of the Magsol scents. The magnesium works great at a deodorant and it's non-irritating, so for me it was just a matter of finding a scent that I liked that did not overpower my senses. A web page I found said that patchouli is a scent from natural sources that hippies would use to cover up other aromas. While I'm not an old hippie myself (I'm not old enough to be an old hippie), I personally know several old hippies so patchouli should be a scent that I'm familiar with.The patchouli scent did take me back, but not for the reason I was expecting. I'm reminded of getting a haircut as a child in small town America (and I mean smaaaaalllllll town America). Lud was 85 years old and the only barber in town. His shop was downtown in this tiny unpainted one-room building nestled between two larger buildings. There was a bench in front of the shop where he and Tom Ellis (another 85 year old, not a barber, just an observer) would sit and watch the traffic go by until someone walked up and said they wanted a haircut, at which time everyone went inside. Lud would turn the fluorescent light on over the mirror, which flickered violently until it finally stayed on with a very loud buzz. Besides natural light coming in from the windows, the only other light was a bare incandescent bulb hanging on a cord in the middle of the room. The floor was made of unfinished wooden planks. Lud kept the floor very clean; there were never any stray hairs or dust bunnies to be found. I would climb up into the antique barber chair and make myself comfortable. I'm guessing that the chair was probably as old as Lud was. Once I was settled in, Lud threw the cape over me and snapped it into place. He would then grab the ceramic handle on the chair's lever and hand-pump the seat up to a working level (no foot pedals; the lever pulled back to lower the chair). If you were getting a crew cut, Lud would use this loud electric razor over most of your head, then shape what was left with a comb and scissors. While this was definitely a crew cut, it was not exactly a basic training style haircut. My hair was cut shorter around the ears but was left slightly longer on top. Where I was from, we called this a "burr" haircut. As I got older, my dad no longer required that I get a burr, so I let my hair grow a little longer and parted it on the side. When I started donning this (slightly) longer hair style, Lud finished my haircut by using a straight razor to neaten the hair line on the back of my neck. At that age, either my neck was hairier, or maybe Lud never used the straight razor on kids until the kid was old enough to stop squirming. I always wondered what the leather strop hanging on the back of the chair was for. In case you don't know, it's used to hone the blade of a straight razor. You could tell by the perfectly rhythmic way Lud slapped the blade on the strop that he had done this thousands of times before. Then finally when all the hair cutting was completed, he sprinkled a little talcum powder on a horse hair brush, loosened the cape, and brushed away the hairs on my neck, shoulders, and face.If you haven't guessed by now, the talcum powder that Lud used was patchouli scented. Yes, I like the way it smells.
A**B
5 stars for 16 sticks. 1 star for one stick
I have used this brand of deodorant for 6 years. I absolutely love it. Now my husband loves it too. However the last stick I bought is terrible! I went to their website and there is no contact information to report a problem, so I resort to tell them here. When you open a new stick, there is a protective clear plastic cover over the top. I had a very hard time getting it off. It finally came of taking a wedge of the deodorant stick with it. Then I tried to level it so it wasn’t painful to use. After a week or so there were rough spots and lumps in the surface that I cut off to make it smooth again. It is rough and somewhat painful to apply. I have used it a few more weeks and now look at it - it is rough with very uneven wear and LUMPY. If it was t so expensive I would throw it out. I wantMy money back! What is in this causing it to wear so unevenly? I hate to think what I may be applying to my skin. Can I get a replacement?
A**
Best Aluminum Free Deodorant
After testing Mutiple aluminum free deodorants, this is the only one that doesn't break out my armpits into a red rash.Smells good and lasts all day working outdoors or in a shop without A/C.
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