I'm building this business completely upside down. I never intended to sell a product, I just made a thing I wanted because I wanted it. Then one day I learned about nostr and thought some of you might want it too.

I have no business plan, no name, no site, not even a way for you to pay me yet, nothing but a product with 10 years of R&D behind it and this account.

The story of how it came to be. I hate toothpaste. Foam is not necessary to clean your teeth. They market to you that foaming equals cleaning and then sell you toothpaste that goes off like a science fair volcano in your mouth. Gross.

So I started with an internet search. Turns out I could make my own toothpaste that was likely better. It is simpler with fewer ingredients and I can pronounce all of them. Nothing is there without a good reason. So I started making my own. It was ok but not great, so I refined my recipe, repeatedly, for years.

Now I'm going to scale up the best version I've ever made and sell it to you, I hope.

While I figure out how to accept payments and mix up the first batch, feel free to ask questions and see if my tooth cleaning powder is right for you.

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Discussion

Nice! Are you using xylitol or nano hydroxypipate? And how are you sourcing the ingredients?

Xylitol, yes

Nano Hydroxypipate, no

Sourcing by buying single raw ingredients off the internet just like my personal batches for now. If I find bitcoiner sources I will consider switching.

I have a couple of stages of abrasiveness possible.

Stage 1 ingredients: Calcium Carbonate, Xylitol, Baking Soda, Sea Salt, and Kaolin Clay.

Stage 1 tastes like salt to me with no baking soda taste.

For people who cannot stand the taste of baking soda even a little or want a little more abrasive there will be a second option.

Stage 2 ingredients: Calcium Carbonate, Xylitol, Kaolin Clay, Sea Salt.

Both have a dental abrasiveness that is low enough to be safe for daily use.

What are your thoughts on that recent story about keratin?

https://www.kcl.ac.uk/news/toothpaste-made-from-hair-provides-natural-root-to-repair-teeth

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