Aging Odor Isn't A Hygiene Problem. It's A Chemistry Problem.
Starting around age 40, your skin begins producing 2-Nonenal — an oil-based compound that causes the persistent body odor that follows you no matter how much you scrub. It follows three rules that make it uniquely resistant:
- It's biological, not hygiene-related. You can shower twice a day and still notice it.
- It's water-insoluble. Regular soap, no matter how strong, physically cannot break it down.
- It's solvable. Japanese Diospyros kaki tannins chemically neutralize it — the only natural compound with this exact mechanism.
One formula. One shower. Done.
Regular Soap Cleans Your Skin. This One Fixes Your Chemistry.
2-Nonenal is a water-insoluble aldehyde that regular surfactants physically cannot break down.
Dial, Irish Spring, even "clinical" deodorants are powerless against it. That's not a marketing claim. That's organic chemistry.
Japanese persimmon tannins from authentic Diospyros kaki chemically neutralize it. Not masked. Not covered. Dissolved at the source. One shower. All-day confidence.
Neutralizes At The Molecular Level
Gentle & Nourishing — Not Stripping
Clinically Targeted — Not Perfumed
It's Not Soap. It's a Body Odor Treatment for Less Than $1/Day.
Walk into a drug store. Buy a 12-pack of Irish Spring for $8. Come back here after the 47th shower — when aging odor is still there.
And what does it cost to keep replacing bedding and clothes permanently affected by Nonenal? One bar likely pays for itself in laundry savings alone.
We Built The Exact Opposite of Acid-Based Deodorants.
If you've tried Lume, glycolic acid roll-ons, or mandelic acid sprays — you already know the burning. You know the rash. Our formula was specifically engineered around that failure.
Goat's Milk and Shea Butter counterbalance the astringency of the tannins in real time.
You get the odor-neutralizing power without stripping, chemical burn, or rebound dryness.
Customers with eczema, contact allergies, and severe skin sensitivity use this daily — with zero reactions reported.