with flowers visible
petals closeup
Himachal & Kashmir
mountain source
Bath SaltFor the body. For the self.
Himalayan pink rock salt and ancient mineral salts, combined with dried flowers grown in the mountain valleys of Himachal Pradesh and Kashmir. A magnesium soak that does not just cleanse — it restores.
Someone in a bath or
the salt poured in water
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You cannot pour
from an empty vessel.
Fill yourself first.
There is a kind of tiredness that sleep does not fix. It lives in the muscles, in the joints, in the low hum of a nervous system that has been asked to do too much for too long. You know it. The body knows it before the mind does — the tightness across the shoulders, the weight behind the eyes, the sense that even rest is effortful.
This bath salt was made for that tiredness. Not to mask it. To address it — at the level of minerals, which is where it begins.
Magnesium governs over 300 reactions in the human body. It regulates the nervous system, relaxes muscle fibre, quiets the cortisol response that keeps you alert long after the day has ended. Most people are chronically deficient — not because they have failed to take a supplement, but because modern life depletes it faster than food replenishes it. The skin absorbs magnesium transdermally, directly through the pores, with a speed and efficiency that oral supplementation cannot match. A twenty-minute bath is not indulgence. It is medicine.
The flowers are not decoration. Rose petals from the Kashmir Valley carry anti-inflammatory compounds that calm the skin's surface. Lavender and chamomile from the hillsides of Himachal release aromatic molecules that cross the blood-brain barrier and reduce cortisol measurably. The fragrance you breathe while you bathe is doing something — not to your imagination, but to your biochemistry.
Draw a bath. Pour generously. Close the door. Stay for twenty minutes. Let the water go a little cold before you get out. This is not a luxury. This is the minimum your body deserves — and it has been asking for it longer than you realise.
Three sources.
One ancient recipe.
Mined from ancient sea beds formed 250 million years ago, before industrial pollution existed. Pink from iron oxide — a mineral marker of purity. Eighty-four trace minerals in their natural ionic form. The foundation that gives this bath salt its mineral depth.
Magnesium-rich mineral salts from high-altitude Himalayan formations. The source of the transdermal magnesium that makes this bath genuinely restorative. Not added as a synthetic supplement — present as they exist in nature, alongside the full spectrum of accompanying minerals.
Dried flowers grown in the valleys of Himachal Pradesh and the gardens of Kashmir — rose petals, lavender, chamomile, calendula, marigold. Sun-dried at peak bloom, without preservatives. Each brings its own set of compounds: anti-inflammatory, calming, softening, fragrant. Together they make the water something else entirely.
Twenty minutes.
That is all it takes.
Not hot — warm. Hot water dilates blood vessels rapidly but dissipates the minerals before they can be absorbed. Warm water opens the pores gently and holds the soak.
Two to three large handfuls into the running water. Let the salt dissolve fully before you get in. Watch the flowers open and spread across the surface.
Transdermal mineral absorption takes fifteen to twenty minutes. Put your phone outside the bathroom. Read something. Think nothing. The bath is doing the work.
Pat dry, do not scrub. Let the minerals settle in the skin for a few minutes before moisturising. Your body will tell you it needed this. Listen to it next time before it has to ask so loudly.
Mountain salts.
Valley flowers. Handmade.
or mountain landscape
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Himachal or Kashmir
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or finished product
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