Durable & Sustainable: This T.Taio Esponjabon 2 In 1 Soap Sponge lasts over 40 washes, offering long-lasting use and reducing waste
Convenient 2-in-1: Enjoy the benefits of a soap and sponge in a single, compact product. Perfect for home use and travel, it simplifies your routine and saves space
Gentle Yet Effective: Suitable for all skin types, it cleanses, exfoliates, and massages, leaving your skin feeling refreshed
Easy to Use: Wet, lather, and apply in circular motions for clean, hydrated skin. Rinse and let dry for lasting freshness
Variety of Scents: Experience the ultimate in scent variety, available in three delightful fragrances: Aloe, Lavender, and Cucumber Melon
Available scents: Aloe, Lavender, Cucumber Melon
Product Dimensions : 4 x 2 x 1 inches; 3.84 ounces
What’s Included?
12x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 In 1 Soap Sponge (Lavender) OR
12x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 in 1 Soap Sponge (Cucumber Melon) OR
12x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 in 1 Soap Sponge (Aloe) OR
4x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 In 1 Soap Sponge (Lavender)
4x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 in 1 Soap Sponge (Cucumber Melon)
4x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 in 1 Soap Sponge (Aloe) OR
6x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 In 1 Soap Sponge (Lavender)
6x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 in 1 Soap Sponge (Cucumber Melon)
I can imagine the as-seen-on-tv commercial with some actor trying real hard to make using a regular bar of soap and a luffa at the same time some sort of impossible feat.
@mediocrebot I’m very impressed with interpreting the mixed-language names as intended!
(At least, I assume that’s how they were intended to be interpreted.)
Do people clean themselves with foam sponges like this? Have I been showering wrong? Do these spongers not have the time to use a bar or liquid soap product? Maybe these are good for camping as a space/weight saving item. Or maybe they’re for one-armed people who need to shower just as much as the two-armers. These would be excellent for homeless people to use to “shower” in the local Starbucks restroom sink.
@warpedrotors My mom lives in an assisted living facility and gets help with bathing. I think it would make it a little easier for her and the staff to use something like this.
Am I the only one with more questions than answers after learning this product exists?
Like if the sponge is inside the soap, you have to wear the soap away to use the sponge, right? Or did Edward Norton and Brad Pitt soak the sponges while the soap was cooking? Which means, really, that the soap is inside the sponge and not the other way round.
The lavender has relaxing effect. The cucumber melon has hydrating effect. What does the aloe do? Just clean and maybe help your sunburn?
Why do I want an Irish ham and cheese hot pocket now?
@djslack I think that this product is in fact an allegory for our collective battle with consumerism. While the external layer of soap keeps us squeaky-clean on the outside in our desperate attempt at social presentability, after 40 washes the facade is rinsed away, exposing the naked sponge that has been so dutifully absorbing our most shameful sins up to that point, and is now bursting at the seams with the proverbial soil and grime of our very souls. Just like our living spaces are bursting from the unretrained acquisition of frivolous products obtained from e-commerce mystery boxes.
Maybe we’ve been imagining the lavender all along.
@djslack the Spanish text on the aloe says “efecto humectante con sábila”, “moisturizing effect with aloe”, so the aloe has moisturizing effect but only if you speak Spanish. Us anglophones are stuck with regular old sponge soap.
If there was a 6x Lavender 6x Aloe I’d be in. But I’m suspicious of anything cucumber scented - Although I love eating cucumbers and like their smell when real and fresh, anything I’ve tried that was cucumber scented was pretty gacky.
So on the fence as to whether I want 12x each of Lavender and Aloe. And I wonder want the “pearl” scent (mentioned in the Amazon reviews) is like - never known for pearls to have much of a scent, unless it smells like insides of an oyster.
@stolicat, agree, I want lavender and aloe. Why is is that they never pair items the way we want them. Probably because otherwise they would never get rid of the cucumber ones!
@ekw On an Amazon page there were some closer photos and reviews generally positive. it looked more traditional “spongy” and not that uniform plasticky sponge often from China. It appears these are made in Mexico. But I don’t know what “traditional spongy things” are made of.
@TheStas@troy Funny you mention that, I recently started seeing a new TV advertising campaign about how American (with a capital USA) plastic manufacturers are changing their ways to embrace recycling and re-use and make plastic the great environmentally-wonderful thing of the future. Because apparently a lot of consumers, especially the younger ones with education and disposable income, are actually making purchasing choices about what they want to buy with this in mind.
Since I still can’t recycle almost any plastic in my neighborhood except regular drink bottles, I don’t see this ad campaign as being anything more than a silly thing to laugh at. Plastics were the miracle of the mid-20th-century but really as with anything it’s all about profit.
@pmarin@TheStas@troy That’s not new, plastic manufacturers have been spreading lies about how plastic can be recycled/reused for well over a decade, probably multiple decades. The truth is very little of the plastic that’s accepted for recycling actually gets recycled. Instead it ends up in a landfill, just taking a scenic route through a plastic “recycler” to get there. There’s lots of reasons why, too many to go into here, but it’s easy to find detailed articles & videos about it online.
That’s not to say you shouldn’t try to recycle all the plastic you can, I certainly do, but it’s important to understand that the plastic manufacturers are lying whenever they talk about plastic being recycled/recyclable. We need to reduce plastic usage pronto and it’d also be nice to force the plastic manufacturers to recycle their own products or be heavily fined, so they’re forced to make their lies reality or go bankrupt due to them.
Specs
Product: 12-Pack: T.Taio Esponjabon 2-in-1 Soap Sponge
Model: 741021001156, 741021006656, 741021006663
Condition: New
Durable & Sustainable: This T.Taio Esponjabon 2 In 1 Soap Sponge lasts over 40 washes, offering long-lasting use and reducing waste
Convenient 2-in-1: Enjoy the benefits of a soap and sponge in a single, compact product. Perfect for home use and travel, it simplifies your routine and saves space
Gentle Yet Effective: Suitable for all skin types, it cleanses, exfoliates, and massages, leaving your skin feeling refreshed
Easy to Use: Wet, lather, and apply in circular motions for clean, hydrated skin. Rinse and let dry for lasting freshness
Variety of Scents: Experience the ultimate in scent variety, available in three delightful fragrances: Aloe, Lavender, and Cucumber Melon
Available scents: Aloe, Lavender, Cucumber Melon
Product Dimensions : 4 x 2 x 1 inches; 3.84 ounces
What’s Included?
OR
OR
OR
OR
Price Comparison
$59.88 - $95.88 (for 12) on Amazon
Warranty
90 days
Estimated Delivery
Friday, Apr 12 - Monday, Apr 15
Finally a sponge to wash my soap with!!
/giphy clean that soap
Ooh, I like the eclipse clicky face today
Not the kind of deal I was hoping for you to drop today.
@ShotgunX what kind of deal were you hoping for?
@ShotgunX @troy Presumably one to eclipse all others.
I was hoping for some cheap sunglasses to go with today’s special event.
@hchavers
I can imagine the as-seen-on-tv commercial with some actor trying real hard to make using a regular bar of soap and a luffa at the same time some sort of impossible feat.
“There has to be a better way!”
/showme Esponjabon vs Esponjabob
@mediocrebot I’m very impressed with interpreting the mixed-language names as intended!
(At least, I assume that’s how they were intended to be interpreted.)
I still have plenty of brillo pads.
Do people clean themselves with foam sponges like this? Have I been showering wrong? Do these spongers not have the time to use a bar or liquid soap product? Maybe these are good for camping as a space/weight saving item. Or maybe they’re for one-armed people who need to shower just as much as the two-armers. These would be excellent for homeless people to use to “shower” in the local Starbucks restroom sink.
@warpedrotors My mom lives in an assisted living facility and gets help with bathing. I think it would make it a little easier for her and the staff to use something like this.
@warpedrotors
Well, almost as much.
@macromeh dark… but accurate… I like it.
/showme a one-armed hobo washing himself with a sponge in a Starbucks restroom
Something went terribly wrong. Please try again.
You sonofabitch mediocrebot!
/showme a homeless person showering at Starbucks
I love the Starbucks-esque logo on the backpack. And how none of the patrons are paying any attention to the “showering” operation unfolding there.
@mediocrebot @warpedrotors Is that Nick Nolte?
You are forgiven.
Am I the only one with more questions than answers after learning this product exists?
Like if the sponge is inside the soap, you have to wear the soap away to use the sponge, right? Or did Edward Norton and Brad Pitt soak the sponges while the soap was cooking? Which means, really, that the soap is inside the sponge and not the other way round.
The lavender has relaxing effect. The cucumber melon has hydrating effect. What does the aloe do? Just clean and maybe help your sunburn?
Why do I want an Irish ham and cheese hot pocket now?
@djslack I think that this product is in fact an allegory for our collective battle with consumerism. While the external layer of soap keeps us squeaky-clean on the outside in our desperate attempt at social presentability, after 40 washes the facade is rinsed away, exposing the naked sponge that has been so dutifully absorbing our most shameful sins up to that point, and is now bursting at the seams with the proverbial soil and grime of our very souls. Just like our living spaces are bursting from the unretrained acquisition of frivolous products obtained from e-commerce mystery boxes.
Maybe we’ve been imagining the lavender all along.
@djslack the Spanish text on the aloe says “efecto humectante con sábila”, “moisturizing effect with aloe”, so the aloe has moisturizing effect but only if you speak Spanish. Us anglophones are stuck with regular old sponge soap.
/showme someone looking at eclipse without special glasses
Those glasses definitely aren’t special, @mediocrebot
@haydesigner wow, really an ol’ four eyes, huh? Bet the peripheral is out of this world!
/showme Esponjabon looking at the eclipse
/showme Esponjabon using an Epson
/showme no habla esponjabon
Who scrubs up the pineapple under the sea?
Esponjabon esquerpanto!
Life-like(?) Patrick freaks me out.
@mediocrebot That’s hullirious!
If there was a 6x Lavender 6x Aloe I’d be in. But I’m suspicious of anything cucumber scented - Although I love eating cucumbers and like their smell when real and fresh, anything I’ve tried that was cucumber scented was pretty gacky.
So on the fence as to whether I want 12x each of Lavender and Aloe. And I wonder want the “pearl” scent (mentioned in the Amazon reviews) is like - never known for pearls to have much of a scent, unless it smells like insides of an oyster.
@stolicat
That’s a real pickle.
@stolicat, agree, I want lavender and aloe. Why is is that they never pair items the way we want them. Probably because otherwise they would never get rid of the cucumber ones!
/showme Esponjabòn drinking Espolòn with a cabrón
my question would be - what’s the sponge made out of?
because I am really trying to reduce my plastic usage.
@ekw On an Amazon page there were some closer photos and reviews generally positive. it looked more traditional “spongy” and not that uniform plasticky sponge often from China. It appears these are made in Mexico. But I don’t know what “traditional spongy things” are made of.
/giphy sorrowful-methodical-army
this seems great for the environment
@TheStas Compared to body wash housed in a plastic container, what’s the difference?
@TheStas @troy Funny you mention that, I recently started seeing a new TV advertising campaign about how American (with a capital USA) plastic manufacturers are changing their ways to embrace recycling and re-use and make plastic the great environmentally-wonderful thing of the future. Because apparently a lot of consumers, especially the younger ones with education and disposable income, are actually making purchasing choices about what they want to buy with this in mind.
Since I still can’t recycle almost any plastic in my neighborhood except regular drink bottles, I don’t see this ad campaign as being anything more than a silly thing to laugh at. Plastics were the miracle of the mid-20th-century but really as with anything it’s all about profit.
/youtube The Graduate Plastics
@pmarin @TheStas @troy That’s not new, plastic manufacturers have been spreading lies about how plastic can be recycled/reused for well over a decade, probably multiple decades. The truth is very little of the plastic that’s accepted for recycling actually gets recycled. Instead it ends up in a landfill, just taking a scenic route through a plastic “recycler” to get there. There’s lots of reasons why, too many to go into here, but it’s easy to find detailed articles & videos about it online.
That’s not to say you shouldn’t try to recycle all the plastic you can, I certainly do, but it’s important to understand that the plastic manufacturers are lying whenever they talk about plastic being recycled/recyclable. We need to reduce plastic usage pronto and it’d also be nice to force the plastic manufacturers to recycle their own products or be heavily fined, so they’re forced to make their lies reality or go bankrupt due to them.
@KevinS10 @pmarin @TheStas @troy This is a video on that subject which I stumbled upon recently:
It’s a bit long (30 minutes), but a decent overview the problems with plastic recycling, including a review of the entire history of plastic.
Is this a typo? Is it supposed to be 4 of each scent, otherwise wouldn’t it just say 4 lavender and 8 cucumber melon:
4x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 In 1 Soap Sponge (Lavender)
4x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 in 1 Soap Sponge (Cucumber Melon)
4x T.Taio Esponjabon 2 in 1 Soap Sponge (Cucumber Melon)
@jmrobinett Good catch. The options on the purchase page had it listed correctly, and now the information above does, too.
Why didn’t I get to use my Brad free shipping code?
@adair5374 the coupon code option is on the checkout screen. If the coupon is valid with this offer it will work.
To borrow from a recent ecoBee ad: is this gluten free?