I'm not sure a product which you can and will run out of really fits this community.
Buy it for Life
A place to share practical, durable and quality made products that are made to last, with an emphasis on upcycled and sustainable products!
Guidelines:
Things that are well-made and durable (even if they won't last a lifetime) are A-Okay!
Unlike that other BIFL place, Home-made and DIY items are encouraged here, as long as some form of instruction is included in the body of the post.
Videos links are not allowed as post titles, but you may use them in a text post.
A limited amount of self-promotion is accepted, IF the item you are selling aligns with this criteria:
- The item must be made with sustainable or recycled materials.
- If electronic in some way, the item must be open-source.
- The item must be user-serviceable (if applicable).
- You cannot be a large corporation.
- The post must be clearly marked with a [Self Promotion] tag in your title.
Plot twist: They'll never use it.
For what it's worth, lanolin is not vegan, despite the pictured ad claiming it's ethically sourced and implying that animals are not harmed. Lanolin is produced from wool, and if you care about such things, often a result of unpleasant (to say the least) farming conditions for sheep. Probably there are some sources that aren't so bad, but apparently there are reports that wool industry practices are pretty horrific to the sheep. (Read more here and here if you like.)
On the positive side though, there are plant-based lanolin alternatives, including vegan nipple creams. I couldn't find any source that weren't also ads for a product, so I'll leave the search up to whoever is interested in them.
Lanolin? L-Lanolin. Like sheep’s wool?
Yes wool oil, ovine sebum.
for some people it's an excellent topical ointment. for others like me, we're allergic and it makes us itchy
For anyone curious about the ethical discussion folks are having
Crude lanolin constitutes about 5–25% of the weight of freshly shorn wool. The wool from one Merino sheep will produce about 250–300 ml of recoverable wool grease. Lanolin is extracted by washing the wool in hot water with a special wool scouring detergent to remove dirt, wool grease (crude lanolin), suint (sweat salts), and anything else stuck to the wool. The wool grease is continuously removed during this washing process by centrifuge separators, which concentrate it into a waxlike substance melting at approximately 38 °C (100 °F).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanolin?wprov=sfla1
It seems like lanolin is typically extracted from the shorn wool, so I assume the comments about ethics are with respect to harvesting that wool in the first place, so if you're interested in learning more, that's where you'd want to research. I'm not intending to debate whether it is or isn't ethical (I know next to nothing about the wool industry), I just had no idea how lanolin might be obtained from a sheep, so I looked it up and figured I'd share since it's relevant to some of the conversation here
Omg yes. Learned that on a sailboat. Lanicote. Not just for bolts.
Nuts too?
nipples and nuts, yes.
Good for nipples, babies, and moustaches, gotcha.
Now what about those other thousands of uses? 🤔
What else do you need??
Vegetable oil, motor oil, WD-40, KY Jelly...
What if I don't have lanolin nipples, though? Do they have a human skin nipple lotion?
You had me at “eat it”. What’s it taste like?
It tastes like nothing. Bland nothing. I thought it would taste like sheep smell, but no.
Drats! Oh well, nipples it is then!
My wife and I have a long running joke about nipple butter, where we suggest uncommon and comedic uses for it with extreme exuberance. Your post made me chuckle and I immediately sent it to her!
Then I read the rest of the comments and got sad...
FYI lanolin (or "sheep grease") is an animal product that is obtained through violence, cruelty, and at industrial scale, atrocity. This may not concern you, but just in case it does.
I did not know that. Thank you.