Most people assume large skincare brands source responsibly because they have the resources to do it right. Most people also assume small brands like ours probably don't think about it much. Both assumptions are worth examining.
The Assumption About Ingredient Sourcing
When a customer buys from a well-known skincare brand, there's often an unspoken trust that comes with the size of the company. Big brand, big standards. But size is not integrity. In fact, the bigger the supplier, the more we require them to prove to us.
Larger companies have the budget to cause real harm like deforestation in countries we can't see, animal testing that happens quietly, environmental damage in places we'll never visit. The certifications that matter most to us are the ones we require of our largest suppliers, not the ones we'd put on our own finished product label. This is a distinction we wrote about in depth here — certifications matter upstream, at the sourcing level, not as a marketing badge on a jar.
Every ingredient in every bar has a sourcing story we can account for.
Why We Don't Use Palm Oil
This is one of the clearest examples of a sourcing decision rooted in values rather than convenience.
Palm oil is widely used in skincare and soap making. Some suppliers market it as responsibly harvested. But since deforestation caused by palm farming in parts of Asia and Africa became widely documented, we made a decision early on: we don't use it. Mainly because we can't verify, from where we stand, that the harm isn't happening. These places are far away. Supplier practices are difficult to monitor. And we are not willing to benefit from something we cannot fully account for.
That decision has never changed. It was made when SoapLife360 was founded and it stands today.
What We Require From Our Suppliers
For larger suppliers, we require documentation. Certifications, Certificates of Analysis, animal testing policies, sourcing transparency. Our primary cold-pressed oils supplier carries USDA Organic, Fair Trade USA, Fair For Life, Non-GMO Project Verified, COSMOS Approved, and several other certifications across their product line. They provide a Certificate of Analysis with every order which is a document that shows exactly how an ingredient was extracted, what it contains, and whether it meets the standards we require.
That Certificate of Analysis is not optional for us. It is how we verify that what we say is in a SoapLife360 product is actually in it and sourced the way we say it was sourced, extracted the way we believe it should be extracted.
Our essential oil relationships go back decades. That chain of trust matters.
How We Find Our Suppliers
Very few of our sourcing relationships come from referrals. Founders in the natural products space tend to be protective of their supplier networks and understandably so. Most of our sourcing relationships come from research, industry education, and being physically present in our city.
St. Louis has supplier districts areas where wholesale and specialty ingredient companies operate close to one another. When we're sourcing locally, it's often as straightforward as walking into a district, asking questions, and letting one company point us toward another. Local suppliers are often more forthcoming than you'd expect. They know each other. They'll send you across the street if they can't help you themselves.
For essential oils, some of our most trusted relationships are with local suppliers who have been distilling or sourcing their own oils for decades, long before SoapLife360 existed. Their vetting process goes back thirty to forty years. When we buy from them, we're inheriting a chain of trust that has been built and tested over a timeline longer than our own business. They are also an ongoing source of education offering advice for how to safely work with resins that need to be warmed before use, how to calculate safe dilution rates, how to adjust concentrations for facial products. That kind of support is not something we take for granted.
The Community Farm We Can Walk To
Some of the herbs we use in our oil infusions; the same slow cold-infusion process we documented in our fennel seed post that came from a community farm in our neighborhood. Walking distance from our workshop.
We know this source. We can see it. We know it's clean, sustainable, and grown without the variables that come with large-scale agricultural production. That kind of proximity is something a large brand with massive supply contracts simply cannot replicate.
Some of our ingredients come from here. Walking distance from our workshop.
The Flexibility a Small Brand Has That a Large One Doesn't
One of the least discussed advantages of small-batch production is the ability to pivot. When a supplier's practices change, when standards shift, when something about a sourcing relationship no longer aligns with our values, we can change course. We order in small quantities close to batch time, which means we are never locked into a contract that forces us to compromise.
A large brand working with massive suppliers on long-term contracts does not have that flexibility. They are committed. They have warehouses full of inventory. Changing suppliers is a years-long process for them. For us, it can happen with the next order.
We are also part of formulating communities and networks of small makers and educators in the natural products space. When an ingredient we want to use has a high minimum order quantity that's too large for a single small batch, sometimes a group of us will share the order. This keeps specialty ingredients accessible to small makers who would otherwise be priced out and it keeps us connected to the same high-quality sourcing that larger brands rely on.
What Customers Should Know About Small Brand Sourcing
The most common misconception is that small brands don't think about sourcing. That without certifications on our finished products, we must be cutting corners. That we're too focused on survival to be focused on standards.
The opposite is true. Small brands in the natural products space are often more invested in their sourcing relationships than large brands, precisely because we don't have a certification to hide behind. We have to know. We have to verify. We have to maintain relationships, ask questions, and stay current. Because if something goes wrong with an ingredient, there is no corporate shield between us and our customers.
And here is what we want our customers to understand: responsible sourcing is not complicated. It is not reserved for companies with large compliance departments. It is a practice and a set of questions you ask before every order. It's a standard you hold before you let anything into your workshop. It's a relationship you build with people who share your values.
Every batch. Every ingredient. Every time.

