Ive thought about it and the only reason I can think is that they donit so much that maybe walking backwards all the time fucks up their feet/back or just their balance. But I agree it would make more sense to walk backward
These square bars of olive oil soap are pure heaven. I buy them at a local Mediterranean import shop. The scent is so naturally clean and your skin feels nourished. My favorite.
I'm all for low tech, traditional crafts don't get me wrong. But try telling your gf her authentic Turkish soap was made by a big, hairy dude in worn jeans sitting on it barefooted...
As you can see in the video title, this is a traditional soap production factory. Of course, I can understand this reaction because there is a wall full of factory-made products around you. Because most of you have forgotten how to make a product in a traditional way. I see many comments about workers stepping on the soap, but for some reason no one talks about the labor of the workers. First of all, a lot of effort and time is spent on these soaps and they come to us completely thanks to traditional methods. I think this feeling is priceless in this world where even people have started to be factories. I live in Türkiye and I was born in the city where these soaps are produced and we use the soap with pleasure as a family. And I am proud of the labor of the people and workers in my country.🙂
Proud of the workers working for an employer who won't give them tools to make their job easier. Back breaking work, the smell of chemicals all day, for a mere minimum wage, so that privileged people can brag about their soap being made by modern sl*ves using their hands and feet.
And you never thought about how the workers are suffering when they could've been given proper equipment, just so your privileged self can brag about your soap made by modern day S L * V E S using their hands and feet
Wow, I’ve never seen the process behind Olive Oil Soap production before! It's fascinating to watch how these natural ingredients come together in such a precise and thoughtful way. The craftsmanship involved is impressive, and it really gives you a new appreciation for the soap we use every day. This episode is both educational and inspiring - love the behind-the-scenes look! Amazing!
Anyone who is wondering why they don't walk backwards is possibly the floor is slippery since they are working with a soap made out of oil and powder keeps their feet dry so they don't slip.
1:18 I admire this guy’s skill at evenly dispersing that powder. I would hate having that job though with my OCD, because it would never be even enough, or the stress of constantly trying to be as even as possible
I bought Aleppo soap bars and I haven’t gone back since! They lather up excellently and they don’t leave a soap scum. It doesn’t matter how oily my hair is I only have to lather it up once. A little bit goes a long way, one bar can last me 4-5 months of daily use as a body lather and 2 times a week for my hair.
Hate to say it, but what's actually working for you here is the fact it's an Olive Oil soap. Protect your health and buy only from western manufacturers that use PPE and implement other safety standards for their workers. The fact they cure the soap in the city air where people burn their trash should be enough for you to turn back.
Not even a little bit close buddy. These guys are Allied with the ones who actually built the tunnels and murdered all the people using them 😂 Edit: genocided
First, let me say that yes, I am weird. And I have this thing about feet. they gross me out. So while I was fascinated with how they made all that soap on literal manpower and not machines, and especially with the stacks of it like towers, the idea of all those bare feet walking on it gave me the willies. All I could think was dead foot skin in every bar. And before you say anything, I'm sure their feet are VERY CLEAN and VERY HEALTHY. It's just my own repulsion with feet. That candle dipping and carving was truly artistic. And those gorgeous polished slabs were incredible. That last one all I could think was what an amazing job they were doing in what must be a very HOT and dangerous job. All of it was completely fascinating.
I've heard tales about how the English people are naturally repulsed by feet so much they even hate animal feet, simply because that's the limb that walks on the ground and on gross stuff. Totally acceptable. But I'm with you on this one, I'm as well repulsed by the human feet, the shape the structure, all. I hate it, nature's ugliest design. Not to mention that's soap, some people are biting into that😂
Here's what gets me thinking, if this is how they make this soap, how is *my* soap made because it's not got a video on UA-cam? I know how P&G operates (thanks to a friend who worked there) and I can never buy their beauty products again.
You can just go use the manufactured goods. You don't have to waste time watching these videos. No problem. There are people moved by these slow analogue manpower and are willing to pay for this effort. :)
@@getin3949no, leaving mother country is very very difficult to leave your family behind and language. Plus, there is a LOT OF racism in the rich countries towards immigrants.
Makes you realize how the countries you live in are full of babies that cry about everything meanwhile there are still real men and women like these who will do the job for a fraction of your pay
Nice Greek factory 🥰🇬🇷 Those Greek uncles are the really best! It was a very kind gesture to hang a Turkish flag since the olives came from Turkey. But still this success belongs to you. You really work hard to protect your Greek traditions. Respect! 🫡🇬🇷
I live in Turkey and we do not buy these soaps. Since there are olive and laurel trees in the Mediterranean region, villagers can make this type of soap because it is more natural. This type of soap is called "BITTIM SOAP" and It is generally produced in areas close to the Syrian border where Arabs live. These soaps completely remove the oil from your hair and you will have dry, hard and uncombable hair like felt. That's why villagers only do it by hand to wash their hands. Please do not misunderstand our country :((
When my great-grandparents made soap like that, it was mostly used for laundry. It may be that such soap is still not as harsh as the detergents used today.
Saçma sapan yanlış bilgiler vererek yabancılara karşı şirin görünmeye çalışmanın sebebini anlayamadım. Onlar bizim ülkemizin emekçileri, onlarca yıldır bu şekilde üretim yapıyorlar ve kimseye bunun için açıklama yapmak zorunda değiller. Kimseye zorla sabun satmıyorlar. Ataları kötü kokuları engellemek için duş almak yerine parfümü icat eden insanların modern olduğunu sanma ve kendini onlara açıklama yapmak zorunda hissetme.
Türkler neden yabancı videoların altında sürekli kendilerini ispat ve açıklama peşinde? Bırakın ne düşünürlerse düşünsünler dünyanın en kompleksli milletiyiz. Sabun konusunda bile bizi yanlış tanımasınlar diye çırpınmak...
@@huda1920 when you're proud of your country you don't want others to think or speak negatively about it. Sometimes it will cause folks to overcompensate. 🤷🏾♀️🇺🇸💕
if they : _walk backwards when they spread the white powder _add rails to the wooden soap flattener _add squared mould with the form of soaps _created 3x3 or 4x4 press with the company logo they should work so much easier without machines, just with some optimization
In the end them walking in the powder didn’t seem to affect the quality of the soap or make it harder to remove the soap. Also, if you make a bigger press it would make it way more difficult to press the logo into the soap. By pressing 9 logos instead of one it requires 9x the force, and 9x the cleaning. You already saw how hard they had to swing to press one logo at a time. I think it’s pretty optimized, but I understand the perspective. Personally I just hope the company properly pays its workers for their hard work.
Sooo, we went from soap to candles to stone working and idk what the last one was??? I thought it was all a out just the soap shop. I was expecting a documentary.
Şu amcama bir maske verin bari o kadar pahalı bir şey değil. Öte yandan ülkemizde hala böyle bir fabrikanın hizmet veriyor olması güzel bir şey. Geçmişimize ait değerlerimizi korumalıyız.
her şeyin yapay zekayla oluşturulduğu bu dönemde el emeğiyle üretim yapmak çok zor ama çokta kıymetli. zanaatkarlarımıza bol kazançlar ve bol kolaylıklar diliyorum
The most impressive part of this job has to be the guys who hammer each square. I can barely swing a hammer straight once. Let alone a few thousand times per little square. Sidenote: this is almost like laying concrete.
Did anyone catch what the company name is? I’d love to try some. I’ve made homemade soap before and know how much work goes into making even a small batch. Always love seeing traditional craftspeople bucking the mechanized trend. I could watch these people cutting, stamping, & stacking soap all day.
They seemed to be from different brands: Güvenel (or Güvenal), Doktoroğlu and Çiçek. But don’t think they’re marketed directly at consumers. Most of these soaps are sold quite cheaply in no name shops.
It must smell heavenly there. I wonder if the factory has an on-site shower/bath house where employees can wash themselves clean with the very soap they're responsible for making. If they don't, they should. 🤷🏼♂️
I have no doubt that their feet are super clean. I'm concerned about their back condition. Thank you for the video that reminds me the value and moving of human labor.
They aren't spreading lye on the floor... Lye gets mixed into water, then in to the oil, which has a reaction of "saponification" and the lye is "eaten" by the oils and no longer exists in the finished product. Middle school kids make this in science class....
IMO it's fake. Staged for the video because it looked cool and then taken apart . There's no need to build it up from the inside and those workers are not stupid.
@@TheDarthvader123 Now that's just being, There are so many words I can use, but I keep coming back to this particular word so excuse its simplicity, silly.
First, you might want to change your title; the video nis more than just "Soap." Secondly, I just realized now to make millions of dollars; sell shoes/work boots in Third-world countrties. Lastly, I LOVE those candles....can you give us her name/company or a link?
After reading most of the comments about bare feet on soap, I wonder how many of those people drink wine and would they say the same thing about crushing grapes bare feet to make wine the traditional way.
I wouldn't drink it at all. I love me some Malbec wine with NO feet in it and passing all the food safety/bromatology standards, and preferably with clean workers who know what a bidet and a daily shower is.
@@joshuawalker301 I like your standards and agree on the bidet and daily shower but I haven't seen any bidet in any factory here in down under and guess it's the same in the west.
So you get a guy who's bear footed dusting the floor where the soap goes , then a guy with dirty shoes stands on the dusted floor when dumping the soap how unhygienic
@@mustafakemalkoksal4111 Soap is not a disinfectant. It makes you cleaner by covering the dirt particulets in a thin layer, which separates them from you, and then you wash that away with water. Without flowing water, it just gets dirty, because it soaks up dirt, but doesn't get washed away.
@@mustafakemalkoksal4111 Bir insan neden böyle bir şeyi kıskansın? Sence şu yapılan işlem normal gibi mi gözüküyor? Bi insan şu sabunu eğer gerizekalı değilse üzerine basmadan yapmanın 50 farklı yolunu bulabilir. O kalıplar arasına yürümek için yol koyabilirler, malzemeyi döktükten sonra çekmek için kalıba paralel makaralı bir sistem yapılabilir. Yüzlerce seçenek var amk. Daha da önemlisi burdaki adamların hiçbirinin ne beli ağrır, ne de herhangi bir sağlık problemi yaşarlar.
They should keep a bag of that talcum powder for when they hammer in the company logo. It would save them from having to carve out the soap from the hammer every few hits.
In one hand, you get bare feet with each soap. In the other hand they are probably the cleanest feet of any industry.
where's the downside doe
soap can't really get dirty though. It's soap. That would be like trying to light water on fire.
@@danyukhin oh nooooooo 😭
so if you throw dirt on soap it just evaporates?
@@philemonzz yeah
I dont understand why they wont spread the powder while walking backwards so there will be no footprints
my thinking exactly, they work bad.
Who's to say they don't want footprints on it
😅Да да
오늘은 형제의 나라 튀르키예이~ 흰색 위로 발바닥 자국이라니 야하죠~
Ive thought about it and the only reason I can think is that they donit so much that maybe walking backwards all the time fucks up their feet/back or just their balance. But I agree it would make more sense to walk backward
Always wash your soap before use.
ㅋㅋㅋ
😮😮😮
Inside too
bro...soap kills 99.9% of bacteria and germs, it is literally the one case of these barefoot workers where it literally does not matter
Whenever I see green soap, the image of these men will be with me. I will not be using it 😂
These square bars of olive oil soap are pure heaven. I buy them at a local Mediterranean import shop. The scent is so naturally clean and your skin feels nourished. My favorite.
Good for you
Yes.Definitely
with a side of feet
@@lambrah2k lol
gotta love the extra foot fungi
Ngl I’m high right now and I thought he was spreading out guacamole with a broom and now I’m disappointed.
Before I read the title I thought it was gonna be a Matcha snack 😭
Wow, that’s some back breaking work. I love the stacked soap towers during the drying stage.
05:23 I saw the guy stacking while he's in the middle and I'm wondering, how the F does he get out without collapsing the tower??? (-_-) (O_o)
@@TheJunkymagi He doesn't. He has to wait for it to dry after which he is allowed to toss over the tower which leads to 6:30
He becomes the soap
I'm all for low tech, traditional crafts don't get me wrong. But try telling your gf her authentic Turkish soap was made by a big, hairy dude in worn jeans sitting on it barefooted...
You have it backwards. Your girlfriend already know this and has been hiding it from you
😂
That's what makes it authentic unlike the mass produced by machines. Why do you think Rolls-Royce costs more than Toyota.
@@akinolalawson2112 Because Rolls Royces are made by big barefooted hairy dudes in worn jeans sit on the upholstery?
Imagine how clean their feet must be, walking around on soap all day 😂
Everyone has it backward: world's cleanest feet.
Worlds fartiest smelling soap
There is something you don't know. Muslims wash their feet 5×3=15 times a day. and this is no joke.
@FireMaiden.666 so dumb. You don't get how shit works obviously.
Your great grandparents lived their whole lives without using a single soap.
@@dogrudiyosunyeah, and that's why they lived so short
As you can see in the video title, this is a traditional soap production factory. Of course, I can understand this reaction because there is a wall full of factory-made products around you. Because most of you have forgotten how to make a product in a traditional way. I see many comments about workers stepping on the soap, but for some reason no one talks about the labor of the workers. First of all, a lot of effort and time is spent on these soaps and they come to us completely thanks to traditional methods. I think this feeling is priceless in this world where even people have started to be factories. I live in Türkiye and I was born in the city where these soaps are produced and we use the soap with pleasure as a family. And I am proud of the labor of the people and workers in my country.🙂
Betul sekali saudara, sangat bangga dengan para pekerja. Salam dari Indonesia 🙏
Proud of the workers working for an employer who won't give them tools to make their job easier. Back breaking work, the smell of chemicals all day, for a mere minimum wage, so that privileged people can brag about their soap being made by modern sl*ves using their hands and feet.
And you never thought about how the workers are suffering when they could've been given proper equipment, just so your privileged self can brag about your soap made by modern day S L * V E S using their hands and feet
People are concerned about sanitation. Lots of people make things traditionally, including soap…in the West. Handcrafters are everywhere.
Its soap! Its self cleaning!
Wow! It’s hand and foot crafted. I’d like to try this soap.
거짓말 쟁이 .
@@dgg3370ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ거짓말쟁이래
With a stamp of sweaty ass on each soap
비누에는 세균이 어차피 증식 못하기 때문에 저렇게 전통방식 고수하면서 만드는 비누공장이 하나쯤은 있어도 된다고 본다.
But fungus can stay dormant
@@Vandanms 오.. 그건 몰랐네!
@@Vandanms 저 맨발로 비누 만드는 사람이 만약 무좀이 있다면 큰일 나겠네...
I like how simple the video is with no music, its calming in a way
It is so satisfying when the workers flatten the soap
Wow, I’ve never seen the process behind Olive Oil Soap production before! It's fascinating to watch how these natural ingredients come together in such a precise and thoughtful way. The craftsmanship involved is impressive, and it really gives you a new appreciation for the soap we use every day. This episode is both educational and inspiring - love the behind-the-scenes look! Amazing!
こういう人が作業してる風景見てるのなんか落ち着く
Anyone who is wondering why they don't walk backwards is possibly the floor is slippery since they are working with a soap made out of oil and powder keeps their feet dry so they don't slip.
How did this video go from soap to candles to truck rims
1:18 I admire this guy’s skill at evenly dispersing that powder. I would hate having that job though with my OCD, because it would never be even enough, or the stress of constantly trying to be as even as possible
約25年以上、使っています。洗髪にも洗顔にも使っています。さっぱりなのにしっとりな使い心地が最高です。おそらくこれからも一生、手に入れられるうちはずっと使い続けると思います。これからもよろしくお願いします😊
0.1percent of you is that hair man
Beato te!🤩
I bought Aleppo soap bars and I haven’t gone back since! They lather up excellently and they don’t leave a soap scum. It doesn’t matter how oily my hair is I only have to lather it up once. A little bit goes a long way, one bar can last me 4-5 months of daily use as a body lather and 2 times a week for my hair.
What’s a leppo?
@ it’s a type of soap made like this but all natural and comes from Aleppo, Syria
Hate to say it, but what's actually working for you here is the fact it's an Olive Oil soap. Protect your health and buy only from western manufacturers that use PPE and implement other safety standards for their workers. The fact they cure the soap in the city air where people burn their trash should be enough for you to turn back.
@@Largemarge666 yeah you’re probably into that….
@@Largemarge666 Watch a UA-cam video and educate yourself
If you are wondering about the guys encasing themselves in soap. They have a sophisticated underground tunnel system to get out once finished.
Not even a little bit close buddy. These guys are Allied with the ones who actually built the tunnels and murdered all the people using them 😂
Edit: genocided
First, let me say that yes, I am weird. And I have this thing about feet. they gross me out. So while I was fascinated with how they made all that soap on literal manpower and not machines, and especially with the stacks of it like towers, the idea of all those bare feet walking on it gave me the willies. All I could think was dead foot skin in every bar. And before you say anything, I'm sure their feet are VERY CLEAN and VERY HEALTHY. It's just my own repulsion with feet. That candle dipping and carving was truly artistic. And those gorgeous polished slabs were incredible. That last one all I could think was what an amazing job they were doing in what must be a very HOT and dangerous job. All of it was completely fascinating.
You’re not weird. It’s natural to not want to clean yourself by something that’s been walked on by bare feet (clean or not, doesn’t matter).
I've heard tales about how the English people are naturally repulsed by feet so much they even hate animal feet, simply because that's the limb that walks on the ground and on gross stuff. Totally acceptable. But I'm with you on this one, I'm as well repulsed by the human feet, the shape the structure, all. I hate it, nature's ugliest design. Not to mention that's soap, some people are biting into that😂
Here's what gets me thinking, if this is how they make this soap, how is *my* soap made because it's not got a video on UA-cam? I know how P&G operates (thanks to a friend who worked there) and I can never buy their beauty products again.
@@AnimestherYou're not alone. I have no clue why I think that way tho.
You can just go use the manufactured goods. You don't have to waste time watching these videos. No problem. There are people moved by these slow analogue manpower and are willing to pay for this effort. :)
There’s absolute no protection for the metal workers, risking their limbs and life every day just doing their job. We have it so lucky here in the UK
That’s why their countries are considered third world - slow to develop, low factory safety, poor countries.
You choose what you do and where you live.
Tu commentes que de la merde sur cette chaîne c'est ouf. @@getin3949
That's what everyone is saying about the UK these days.
How lucky they must be to be living there.
@@getin3949no, leaving mother country is very very difficult to leave your family behind and language. Plus, there is a LOT OF racism in the rich countries towards immigrants.
굉장하네요. 허리 진짜 많이 아프겠지만 향기 진동하는 곳에서 비누 만들어 나오는 거 보는 것도 나름 뿌듯할 것 같긴 해요.(이 말 진짜 못 알아듣는 사람들 많아 한달째 놀라는 중)
근데 위생이 결여되어있는데요;;
@@유링게이슈웅 발바닥용 비누입니다.. 걱정 ㄴㄴ
@유링게이슈웅 저런 환경에서 위생을 기대해요?
@@유링게이슈웅허허허 비누를 만드는데 무슨 위생을 말하는 건지.. 비누 위에서 세균증식 걱정하나요?
이건 집에서 맨손으로 야채 씻어 먹으면서 맨손으로 냉면면발 흐르는 찬물에 씻는다고 뭐라 하던 서양인을 보는 거 같군요..
@@유링게이슈웅뭔 위생…? 너보다 깨끗해보이는데
Occupational health and safety really is different around the world.
Cottage industry so OSHA has no control
Makes you realize how the countries you live in are full of babies that cry about everything meanwhile there are still real men and women like these who will do the job for a fraction of your pay
I wonder if these guys did concrete before this XD respect
I just had several slabs poured for my barn and I honestly thought the same lol
i drive a cement truck and i was like oh they’ve def worked pouring slab before 😆
i like to swim in uncured concrete slabs sometimes
what year are you in brother?
They must be the cleanest workers ever 😂🤣
Doubt it
Don't look it. Sweaty old man arse soap
especially their feet
@rebeccaconlon9743 it's a joke dummy. They're working with soap, get it...😑
Nice Greek factory 🥰🇬🇷 Those Greek uncles are the really best! It was a very kind gesture to hang a Turkish flag since the olives came from Turkey. But still this success belongs to you. You really work hard to protect your Greek traditions. Respect! 🫡🇬🇷
Betül bunlar adanalı gibi geldi bana
興味深く、魅力的な動画でした。機械で生産される程の大量の商品を、この石鹸工場では人力で行なっています。
どのメーカーでも、始まりはこのような姿があったでしょう。彼らは歴史を大切にしているのですね。素晴らしい。
I'll take a corner piece, please! I love the crunchy edges
Disgusting lol😂
I live in Turkey and we do not buy these soaps. Since there are olive and laurel trees in the Mediterranean region, villagers can make this type of soap because it is more natural. This type of soap is called "BITTIM SOAP" and It is generally produced in areas close to the Syrian border where Arabs live. These soaps completely remove the oil from your hair and you will have dry, hard and uncombable hair like felt. That's why villagers only do it by hand to wash their hands. Please do not misunderstand our country :((
When my great-grandparents made soap like that, it was mostly used for laundry. It may be that such soap is still not as harsh as the detergents used today.
Saçma sapan yanlış bilgiler vererek yabancılara karşı şirin görünmeye çalışmanın sebebini anlayamadım. Onlar bizim ülkemizin emekçileri, onlarca yıldır bu şekilde üretim yapıyorlar ve kimseye bunun için açıklama yapmak zorunda değiller. Kimseye zorla sabun satmıyorlar. Ataları kötü kokuları engellemek için duş almak yerine parfümü icat eden insanların modern olduğunu sanma ve kendini onlara açıklama yapmak zorunda hissetme.
Türkler neden yabancı videoların altında sürekli kendilerini ispat ve açıklama peşinde? Bırakın ne düşünürlerse düşünsünler dünyanın en kompleksli milletiyiz. Sabun konusunda bile bizi yanlış tanımasınlar diye çırpınmak...
@@huda1920 when you're proud of your country you don't want others to think or speak negatively about it. Sometimes it will cause folks to overcompensate. 🤷🏾♀️🇺🇸💕
Şimdi de seni ezik sanacaklar :((
if they :
_walk backwards when they spread the white powder
_add rails to the wooden soap flattener
_add squared mould with the form of soaps
_created 3x3 or 4x4 press with the company logo
they should work so much easier without machines, just with some optimization
In the end them walking in the powder didn’t seem to affect the quality of the soap or make it harder to remove the soap. Also, if you make a bigger press it would make it way more difficult to press the logo into the soap. By pressing 9 logos instead of one it requires 9x the force, and 9x the cleaning. You already saw how hard they had to swing to press one logo at a time. I think it’s pretty optimized, but I understand the perspective. Personally I just hope the company properly pays its workers for their hard work.
What’s next? You want them to put clean-suits on, and deprive us of dead foot skin and ass sweat on our soap too?
none of that would help
Sooo, we went from soap to candles to stone working and idk what the last one was??? I thought it was all a out just the soap shop. I was expecting a documentary.
This is - hands down - one of the best and long-lasting soaps there is.
凄く興味深かったです。石鹸を円柱状に一個一個積んでいく作業の時、どうやって外に出ているのか気になります😳
퇴근해도 온 몸에서 비누향기나겠다😊 생각만해도 기분이 뽀송뽀송☁️
あの石鹸はあんな風に作ってたのか…裸足にはショックを隠せない。
それはそうと、あんな綺麗な蝋燭は初めて見ました、職人技だわぁ。
おっさんの素足は正直無理ですよね
@@メヤァ와인도 맨발로 포도 밟는거 아닌가?
伝統方式は好きだけど、おじさんの足毛は無理かも
個人的に股に挟んで梱包もちょっと・・・
If it's a soap that pretty sisters have stepped on once, the value of the soap may have changed
So.Many.Feet.
and bit of smell of bum. lol
and shoes
Just defeeted Girl's Frontline 2
right
And bums sitting on it farting
Şu amcama bir maske verin bari o kadar pahalı bir şey değil. Öte yandan ülkemizde hala böyle bir fabrikanın hizmet veriyor olması güzel bir şey. Geçmişimize ait değerlerimizi korumalıyız.
個別に切り分ける時の切れ端の部分、なんか好き
抹茶のチョコレートみたいで美味しそう🤤
her şeyin yapay zekayla oluşturulduğu bu dönemde el emeğiyle üretim yapmak çok zor ama çokta kıymetli. zanaatkarlarımıza bol kazançlar ve bol kolaylıklar diliyorum
1:18 why don’t they do this backwards so they aren’t walking through the powder?
I thought the same thing. Also less dust in your face
6:19 omg one person for that whole pile
Probably slower, and more dangerous, at risk of tripping and falling over.
The most impressive part of this job has to be the guys who hammer each square. I can barely swing a hammer straight once. Let alone a few thousand times per little square.
Sidenote: this is almost like laying concrete.
The look on your face when you open a bar of handcrafted -sofa- -soup- soap and find a black curly hair. 😳
With a root😂
With uneven thickness
Sign of authenticity!
Sofa
@EvilSantaTheTrue thank you. It autocorrected to soup as well. 🤔
الف تحية للشعب السوري ❤❤من العراق اجمل صابون بالزيتون والغار من عندهم وبس❤❤❤
0:18 Machine spotted.
Thats a furnace not a machine
@@kether800you put stuff in it and it comes out looking different so it’s a machine
@@KlongKlongKlongthat‘s definitely not the definition of a machine.
@@KlongKlongKlongthis is how 10 years old trying to explain like an adult but nah we dont buy your stupidity
So if i cut my hair and i come out looking completely different thats a machine?
Did anyone catch what the company name is? I’d love to try some. I’ve made homemade soap before and know how much work goes into making even a small batch. Always love seeing traditional craftspeople bucking the mechanized trend. I could watch these people cutting, stamping, & stacking soap all day.
Google Aleppo soap.
They seemed to be from different brands: Güvenel (or Güvenal), Doktoroğlu and Çiçek. But don’t think they’re marketed directly at consumers. Most of these soaps are sold quite cheaply in no name shops.
Bana ulaş sana daha kalitelisini göndereyim el ayak deymeyen Hacı Şakir hakiki zeytinyağlı en güzel sabun
石鹸の畑だ…
こういう作業動画好き
That last soap factory @15:27 is from another level.
Need another soap for this soap
アレッポの石鹸ですよね。感動しました。最近買ってなかったけど、また買います。カインズにも売ってるし。
It must smell heavenly there. I wonder if the factory has an on-site shower/bath house where employees can wash themselves clean with the very soap they're responsible for making. If they don't, they should. 🤷🏼♂️
You have to wait 6-8 weeks for soap to dry before using. Even longer is better, 4-6 months.
But since they are in an arid climate, maybe not so long.
I have no doubt that their feet are super clean.
I'm concerned about their back condition.
Thank you for the video that reminds me the value and moving of human labor.
cant yall afford some flip flops for the poor dude dusting sodium hydroxide barefoot and breathing through a rag?
They aren't spreading lye on the floor...
Lye gets mixed into water, then in to the oil, which has a reaction of "saponification" and the lye is "eaten" by the oils and no longer exists in the finished product.
Middle school kids make this in science class....
@@jilbertb IDC go breathe some dust
I want to know how they got out of that soap cylinder
was wondering that myself
Exactly, i watched the ceiling asking myself is there something hanging ? But no, im' sooo frustrated this part is missing 🤣
IMO it's fake. Staged for the video because it looked cool and then taken apart . There's no need to build it up from the inside and those workers are not stupid.
🤣🤣🤣
I asked my wife the same thing.
اخيرا عرفت طريقة صنع الصابون الي نستخدمة سعره ليس رخيص جودته ممتازة مقارنة مع الصابون العادي ❤
I love Aleppo soap. I also know how to make my own soap, but do not have access to laurel berry oil in the US, which is what makes this soap SO nice.
This is similar technique to pouring cement. There is nothing in the world quite as lovely and useful as a simple bar of soap.
gerçekten el yapımı ama bonus olrak ayak yapımı da eklenmiş :))
That soap cutting tool looks so satisfying to use.
"machineless" is maybe not the right word
How has no one mentioned the hand-eye coordination of the guy with the mallet?
So a mixing auger isn’t a machine?
普段揚げ足ばっかり取ってそう
00:31 literally machines
Looks like heaters to me. What do you expect him to do it over open coal
@AdmiralStoicRum stfu. It says no machines, those are machines. You know who defends liars? Liars.
@@AdmiralStoicRum Yes... That's what being machineless means? Did you read what you typed or do you always just type stupid shit?
@@AdmiralStoicRumno machines is no machines!
@@TheDarthvader123 Now that's just being, There are so many words I can use, but I keep coming back to this particular word so excuse its simplicity, silly.
First, you might want to change your title; the video nis more than just "Soap." Secondly, I just realized now to make millions of dollars; sell shoes/work boots in Third-world countrties. Lastly, I LOVE those candles....can you give us her name/company or a link?
"Machineless soap factory"
Sees a machine in the first 30 seconds of the vid.
6:59 This is a machine
17:55 18:12 Please give protective glasses for eyes of these poor labourers working in strong fire
I don’t want to
After seeing Veta choping that wax with that knife, I assume her husband is a very good listener 😂
Herşey gelişigüzel maşallah birtane sağlam temiz ekipman yok. Sanki çöpten buldukları malzemeler ile fabrika açmışlar
There are no preventive maintenance. Other than that it works fine from the look of thing. There are almost moving parts in the "machine".
My back hurts just watching this.
You and mine both, was thinking the same thing.
This makes my back hurt watching
Beautiful work❤
YOU DON'T NEED MACHINERY TO MAKE IT A HELL OF ALOT MORE EFFICIENT AND EASIER ON THE WORKERS
The absence of modern machinery may be the reason so many of them have jobs.
Would you want to do that every day all day ?
Machinery would replace 8/10th's of the workers and produce twice as much soap in less than half the time.
@yolandacoburn1312 so building things the hard way deliberately is proping up the economy
So, what are your suggestions?
1:10 I saw a dog do that once. Horrifying.
It's an morning routine.....
🤣
Nothing i love more than a little dried foot skin and fungi on my soap.
6:28 The guy is a beast wrapping
苛性ソーダの粉の上を素足で歩くなんて…。
こうして観ると、一つ一つの製品がどれほどの時間と労力なのかを思い知らされます。
ありがたく使います。
Leçon d'admiration et d'humilité
Beautiful candles.
After reading most of the comments about bare feet on soap, I wonder how many of those people drink wine and would they say the same thing about crushing grapes bare feet to make wine the traditional way.
I wouldn't drink it at all. I love me some Malbec wine with NO feet in it and passing all the food safety/bromatology standards, and preferably with clean workers who know what a bidet and a daily shower is.
@@joshuawalker301 I like your standards and agree on the bidet and daily shower but I haven't seen any bidet in any factory here in down under and guess it's the same in the west.
OMG the last one with all the molten steel and heavy weights.... and bare feet!
You can tell they are doing a clean job 🎉
Now that i seen this operation, id like my business to a machine full soap factory, making sure no hands or feet touches my soap.
Too many govt rules. Your "factory" (kitchen or basement) has to be cleared by the FDA and each batch tested.
Right? Or swampy ass 😭
Health and their safety springs to mind😮
So you get a guy who's bear footed dusting the floor where the soap goes , then a guy with dirty shoes stands on the dusted floor when dumping the soap how unhygienic
Soap = disinfectant = hygiene
Stay in your jealousy. Thank you.
Soap is not a disinfectant unless it has disinfectant in it soap is literally a lubricant and or a degreaser
@@mustafakemalkoksal4111 Soap is not a disinfectant. It makes you cleaner by covering the dirt particulets in a thin layer, which separates them from you, and then you wash that away with water. Without flowing water, it just gets dirty, because it soaks up dirt, but doesn't get washed away.
I like how he’s covering his mouth with his hand, so he doesn’t breathe it in.
@@mustafakemalkoksal4111 Bir insan neden böyle bir şeyi kıskansın? Sence şu yapılan işlem normal gibi mi gözüküyor? Bi insan şu sabunu eğer gerizekalı değilse üzerine basmadan yapmanın 50 farklı yolunu bulabilir. O kalıplar arasına yürümek için yol koyabilirler, malzemeyi döktükten sonra çekmek için kalıba paralel makaralı bir sistem yapılabilir. Yüzlerce seçenek var amk. Daha da önemlisi burdaki adamların hiçbirinin ne beli ağrır, ne de herhangi bir sağlık problemi yaşarlar.
Essence of verruca and tinea pedis , nice.
Is not the first thing I see in the video a machine? 😊
No, it’s a furnace/kiln to heat the soap.
It's amazing how you can make so much of one thing
This is why I make my own soap. Not touched by human hands or feet.
Liar. I make soap too.
How do you unmold, cut, dry, turn, wrap and package your soap without touching it?
They should keep a bag of that talcum powder for when they hammer in the company logo. It would save them from having to carve out the soap from the hammer every few hits.
5:28 how do you get out? Does someone help? How do you climb over without making everything fall? 😂
They have a nap till the soap is dry then brake down the walls 😅
@ 😂😂😂 pretty tiring work stacking all those. For sure a nap is needing 🤭
How could something so clean look so dirty
Fascinating video
01:18 why isn't he walking backwards???
I wish this was broadcast and smell-o-vision.
おじさん達が素足で乗った石鹸…
技術は素晴らしいが知りたくなかった😂
worker powdering his way while steping into the powder every step was funny.
@TEKNIQ So what is the company???
الله يكون بعون الفقراء ❤
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