Want to double-check your labels? Get my FREE Easy-Peasy Label Checklist!

For Members of the HSCG

I am very pleased to announce that I am now an official “HSCG Expert” and as such I have my very own entry in the Handcrafted Soap and Cosmetic Guild’s Expert Consultations page. You can find tons of information on soap and cosmetic labeling and good manufacturing practices. (With more to come!)

In addition, I am providing my Label Review services at a whopping 40% discount to HSCG members. To get the discount as an HSCG member you need to sign up through the HSCG Store – here.

I am also available to answer questions.  There’s a form on my Expert’s Page.  (That service is a benefit for HSCG membership only.)

I’ve been a member of the Handcrafted Soap and Cosmetic Guild for nearly 25 years, and love this organization. I am so happy that we have worked out yet another way in which I can assist the association and the members.

If you make handcrafted soap and cosmetic products and aren’t yet a member, consider joining! Not only do you get great benefits, your membership dues support the industry as a whole.

Just think! With the discount on my label reviews, the savings from just two label reviews could cover the cost of membership!

Good Manufacturing Practices cover

Every handcrafter’s situation is different. To work out the good manufacturing practices that will work for you, get my book from Amazon and use it.

Comments

2 responses to “For Members of the HSCG”

  1. Paul Holland

    Ms. Gale,
    I watched your videos on HSCG website (my wife is a member) and applied the requirements you laid out for soap labeling. The questions is that I found a company, Finch Berry, that appears to only have a rubber band with their company name only…no weight, identification of product or responsible party address…it is on the website. This would be great if one could do this, to minimize package cost, allow customer to see the designs and eliminate any packaging that could cause offense to some customers (nonrecyclables/plastics/etc.). Also one last question, many of the other handmade products only appear to have the city and state product was made in but no zip code? Thank you in advance for your expert advise on the labeling.

    1. The required information must be available at the point of purchase on the label. Putting it on a website doesn’t meet the intention of the law, which is to make it possible for the consumer to make “value judgements.” If they don’t have the information to hand, they can’t compare the value of different products.

      The zip code IS required.

      Remember, just because someone else is doing it doesn’t mean it is correct.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *