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NotHardly

(2,563 posts)
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 09:37 PM 18 hrs ago

I for won do not understand the current trend towards "scent" laundering

Was it not a trend for the last 20+ years that "perfuming or over-perfuming sh*t" would cause problems for breathing, asthma , and other related illnesses?
Have they lost their ever loving minds or simply stupid regarding other folks sensibilities? Asking for a friend who hates man/woman over powering perform sh*t?
63 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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I for won do not understand the current trend towards "scent" laundering (Original Post) NotHardly 18 hrs ago OP
This message was self-deleted by its author yorkster 18 hrs ago #1
I even like some perfumes, but can't stand yorkster 18 hrs ago #2
Especially Gain ProfessorGAC 4 hrs ago #25
I've always wondered about the environmental aspects of "scent-beads" jmbar2 3 hrs ago #38
Probably Not ProfessorGAC 3 hrs ago #44
I respect your scientific knowledge! jmbar2 3 hrs ago #46
I was in California EarthAbides 1 hr ago #53
I absolutely hate that toxic shit. diane in sf 18 hrs ago #3
What Toxic Shit? ProfessorGAC 3 hrs ago #45
European product safety standards have identified toxic compounds in scents. jmbar2 2 hrs ago #47
Phthalates, parabens, synthetic musks, VOCs, terpines, benzene, aldehyde etc womanofthehills 51 min ago #54
I hate scented detergent. Mz Pip 18 hrs ago #4
All stores now sell FREE of scent laundry detergent womanofthehills 47 min ago #55
chill, man. while you are entitled to your personal preference and/or aversion ... stopdiggin 17 hrs ago #5
Actually, about 30% of the population ihas adverse health effects or irritation from scented products. jmbar2 17 hrs ago #9
Bullshit. Sorry for your (individual) difficulties stopdiggin 16 hrs ago #13
That was a big leap to dishwashing liquid and deodorant... jmbar2 15 hrs ago #18
the OP is literal a rant against scented laundry detergent stopdiggin 13 hrs ago #19
my guess is that the OP has greater sensitivity to scented stuff than we do. CTyankee 4 hrs ago #24
Not really. Ms. Toad 4 hrs ago #33
I am allergic to some chemical drying accelerants. haele 3 hrs ago #40
You've got me thinking... jmbar2 3 hrs ago #42
There is plenty of evidence that fragrances lower air quality and pose health risks. femmedem 2 hrs ago #49
the question isn't whether fragrence(s) are 'detectible' (Duh!) stopdiggin 2 hrs ago #52
Would you call a peanut allergy a "preference"? RockCreek 29 min ago #57
no. nor would I have any expectation that other people were going to stop using/consuming them stopdiggin 18 min ago #59
I have literally never been to a clinic, school, hospital, theater, or office Ms. Toad 4 hrs ago #31
My dentist's office has a sign at the entrance saying it's a fragrance-free office femmedem 2 hrs ago #50
When I was in the hospital for surgery fo a broken leg womanofthehills 16 min ago #60
My husband has asthma. The last time we visited a local gallery we had to leave femmedem 3 hrs ago #35
Wrong - so many people now have sensitivity to even tiny scents womanofthehills 35 min ago #56
Since forever, most scents didn't have VOC's and lots of other toxic chemicals womanofthehills 23 min ago #58
I buy unscented everything. bamagal62 17 hrs ago #6
I had bad multiple chemical sensitivity for yrs womanofthehills 6 min ago #63
Agree completely, from someone who is allergic to many cheap perfumes and colognes. Bev54 17 hrs ago #7
It's kind of pricey, too. Morbius 17 hrs ago #8
Actually, you have to pay more for unscented products. Ms. Toad 4 hrs ago #29
I stand in the laundry aisle and open every type of product I want to buy and smell it. Marie Marie 17 hrs ago #10
We have lots of chemically sensitive people in our community because it wasn't used for farming. summer_in_TX 16 hrs ago #11
Wow - what a wonderful church to construct such a safe space jmbar2 15 hrs ago #17
I have asthma and when my mother went out someplace special, she always wore perfume Rhiannon12866 16 hrs ago #12
I'm very sensitive to scents James48 16 hrs ago #14
I was allergic to my fifth grade teacher. Intractable 15 hrs ago #15
Remember sachet? It was put in with your clothes in a drawer. Nice, light scent, not overdone.... CTyankee 15 hrs ago #16
Scented garbage bags are the worst. milestogo 13 hrs ago #20
"Scent" laundering has a very long history jmowreader 6 hrs ago #21
I don't have sensitivities, nor am I a "super-smeller" Nittersing 6 hrs ago #22
Has something changed? Polybius 6 hrs ago #23
I agree, for people with allergies it can become unbearable and detrimental to their health. Irish_Dem 4 hrs ago #26
What Trend Are You Talking About? ProfessorGAC 4 hrs ago #27
I don't agree Mossfern 3 hrs ago #34
Post removed Post removed 3 hrs ago #43
Did somebody say something mean? Mossfern 2 hrs ago #51
Wool dryer balls are awesome and work better for me than dryer sheets with no odor, static Ziggysmom 4 hrs ago #28
I use wool dryer balls Niagara 3 hrs ago #37
I experience the same misbehaving with mine. Also my cats love them! They steal them Ziggysmom 2 hrs ago #48
Off topic but tangential: scented and flavored dental floss hvn_nbr_2 4 hrs ago #30
I had a bad skin reaction to scented dryer sheets. QED 4 hrs ago #32
Makes me sneeze. viva la 3 hrs ago #36
I sincerely doubt that venting about it will have any lasting impact. BootinUp 3 hrs ago #39
It's gross. Thankfully more and more people are going free and clear. Unscented options are the way to go. Blues Heron 3 hrs ago #41
It was way worse when powdered detergents were common. GoCubsGo 8 min ago #61
Scenting everything! mamacita75 8 min ago #62

Response to NotHardly (Original post)

yorkster

(3,648 posts)
2. I even like some perfumes, but can't stand
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 09:51 PM
18 hrs ago

the strong smell of some dryer sheets and laundry detergent.

It has been a thing forever and I wish it would disappear.
Haven't worn perfume for several years, but always used it very sparingly.

ProfessorGAC

(75,711 posts)
25. Especially Gain
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 11:46 AM
4 hrs ago

Overpowering scent.
I worked on projects with P&G and knew that Gain was regional. The south loved it, even over Tide. The rest of the country was Tide; maybe Cheer for the slightly lower cost.
Now, they've managed to market the Gain scent nationwide that there are mon-laundry products with that scent.
I don't like it at all.
I'm not nuts about fabric softener sheet fragrances either.
Funny thing is, I worked on a project early in my career to optimize the average molecular weight (blend of amine chain lengths) of the active ingredient for, you guessed it, fabric softener sheets! I won't even use them.

jmbar2

(7,545 posts)
38. I've always wondered about the environmental aspects of "scent-beads"
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:42 PM
3 hrs ago

If the scent sticks to fabrics post-wash, is it like a forever chemical in the environment?

ProfessorGAC

(75,711 posts)
44. Probably Not
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 01:12 PM
3 hrs ago

Most fragrance compounds are esters, aldehydes & ketone.
Those are all biodegradable.
In fact, having been in flavor & fragrance plants, well over 50% of them are extracted from flowers, fruits & herbs. Those that are synthesized are still those same set of species or some sort of phenolic. Again; biodegradable.
The beads (educated guess) are made of polyethylene glycol (probably 8-10,000 molecular weight) and PEG is readily biodegradable. The ether linkages are pretty easy to break with the bacterial enzymes.
I can't guarantee any of this opinion but with my background I'm pretty darned certain I have this right.

EarthAbides

(416 posts)
53. I was in California
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 03:07 PM
1 hr ago

And I loved Gain back in the 90's. When I would get out my winter clothes or my summer clothes after they were put away for a few months, the scent was amazing. But it is not the same, now, I have been trying to get that fresh scent back, but it is no where to be found. Is it the Gain or is it the new appliances available now?

ProfessorGAC

(75,711 posts)
45. What Toxic Shit?
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 01:14 PM
3 hrs ago

Which fragrance compounds are toxic?
I know of none, and with my background I would know of those that are toxic.
What do you know that I don't? I've never heard of a toxic compound in a fragrance.

jmbar2

(7,545 posts)
47. European product safety standards have identified toxic compounds in scents.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 01:27 PM
2 hrs ago

This is for contact allergens
https://ec.europa.eu/health/scientific_committees/consumer_safety/docs/sccs_o_102.pdf

Here's another from June 2025 (AI summary)

Key Chemicals of Concern for Respiratory Exposure
-Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs): Fragrances release VOCs, which can form harmful secondary pollutants like formaldehyde, worsening indoor air quality and triggering respiratory issues, notes the American Lung Association and NYS DOH.
-Aldehydes: Some, like cinnamaldehyde, are restricted in the EU due to potential to cause skin irritation, respiratory problems, and cancer.
-Phthalates (e.g., DBP): Endocrine disruptors banned in the EU for broader health concerns, but also contribute to poor air quality.
-Known Sensitizers: Ingredients like benzyl salicylate, citral, and isoeugenol are identified as contact allergens, with some shown in studies to potentially induce respiratory sensitization in sensitive individuals.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412025002818#:~:text=As%20of%202023%2C%2056%20fragrance,IFRA%20and%20RIFM%2C%202023).

womanofthehills

(10,692 posts)
54. Phthalates, parabens, synthetic musks, VOCs, terpines, benzene, aldehyde etc
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 03:32 PM
51 min ago

8 Dangerous Ingredients in Perfumes (Watch Out!)
-

https://scienceintheworld.com/mind-body/09846289/2025/05/dangerous-ingredients-perfume/

“How fragrances affect health, and ways to reduce exposure” -


“WHEN WE INHALE the fragrances that surround us in our everyday lives, we might be inhaling hundreds of different chemicals. These scents aren’t closely regulated, and manufacturers aren’t required to disclose everything that’s used to create them.

But we do know that many include volatile organic compounds, or VOCs, which can be irritating and disruptive to our airways and have a number of other negative health effects. We also know that when we breathe in fragrances, we’re breathing in particles small enough to cross the lining of our blood vessels and make their way into our bloodstreams.

We find fragrances not just in perfumes and colognes, but air fresheners, soaps and shampoos, deodorants, laundry detergents and dryer sheets, bug sprays and e-cigarettes, and the list goes on.”

“ What are potential long-term health effects of fragrances?

Difficulty breathing
Changes in cardiac function, specifically in the heart’s ability to pump
Disruption to the endocrine system, which regulates hormones
Increases in glucose levels, similar to those in people with type two diabetes, a risk that can be passed from pregnant women to offspring
Based on early research, possible exacerbation of dementia
Certain cancers, with high, prolonged, continuous exposure to some compounds”

Mz Pip

(28,338 posts)
4. I hate scented detergent.
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 10:01 PM
18 hrs ago

What’s the point? And most of the fragrances are just nasty.

womanofthehills

(10,692 posts)
55. All stores now sell FREE of scent laundry detergent
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 03:36 PM
47 min ago

Even Walmart has a scent free section.

What gets me is the scented garbage bags. Sometimes in my small town if I run out. I can’t find unscented and have to keep my trash bags outside to descent in the sun.

stopdiggin

(14,929 posts)
5. chill, man. while you are entitled to your personal preference and/or aversion ...
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 10:26 PM
17 hrs ago

It's also undeniably true that human beings have been 'scenting' their persons, their attire, their surroundings, their ceremonies, food and drink ... Pretty much since - forever.

Yes, there are extremes (aren't there always?) - and no one is wishing an asthma attack or anaphylactic shock on you or anyone else. But, still ... A little light fragrance on a bar of soap, dish washing liquid - laundry detergent - or the little doohickey hanging from the mirror in your car. Is neither new - or particularly subversive. And those that are not particular fans - are (in general) expected to put up with the lifestyle and preferences of others.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

jmbar2

(7,545 posts)
9. Actually, about 30% of the population ihas adverse health effects or irritation from scented products.
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 11:21 PM
17 hrs ago

That's why scents are generally banned in clinics, hospitals, theaters, schools, courtrooms, and offices.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4627866/
https://www.portland.gov/officeofequity/disability/fragrance-free-spaces

I was unable to live in my apartment due to excessive use of aromatherapy by a neighbor. I developed health issues that worsened over several years of exposure until it became unbearable. Had to sleep in my car for about a year until I could find a scent-free place to move. I no longer have the symptoms where I live now.

it can literally destroy people's lives.

stopdiggin

(14,929 posts)
13. Bullshit. Sorry for your (individual) difficulties
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:01 AM
16 hrs ago

But to frame dish washing liquid (and underarm deodorant) as a global crisis cause major health difficulties .... Not only not buying it - but it literally screams hyperbole.

Like I said - we literally evolved adding 'scent' to our lives - (while gaining both esthetic and practical benefit .. ).
( Now queue the people that are going to explain how fundamentally different using sage - or patchouli - in a healing ceremony - or lemon blossom and lavender in washing one's hair ... The cedar chips in the clothes press and closet - lavender sachet in the sock drawer ... Because 'natural chemicals' verses 'man made' ... Yeah, right ... )

jmbar2

(7,545 posts)
18. That was a big leap to dishwashing liquid and deodorant...
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:56 AM
15 hrs ago

Seems kind of hyperbolic.

stopdiggin

(14,929 posts)
19. the OP is literal a rant against scented laundry detergent
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 02:58 AM
13 hrs ago

(and other 'power performs' ?)
it really is no leap at all.

CTyankee

(67,740 posts)
24. my guess is that the OP has greater sensitivity to scented stuff than we do.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 11:35 AM
4 hrs ago

It's OK to tell us and blow off a bit of steam about it. I guess I might do that too, if I were similarly affected. Or maybe I just don't get out that much.

Ms. Toad

(38,099 posts)
33. Not really.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:20 PM
4 hrs ago

In the community I participate in which is fragrance-free, I can't use Dawn dishwashing liquid to entertain the 0-3 year olds with bubbles because of fragrance. (That brand, specifically, makes a solution which is strong enough to make bubbles around a foot across.). Fragrance (including masking scents) in deodorant are also specifically banned.

haele

(15,034 posts)
40. I am allergic to some chemical drying accelerants.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:45 PM
3 hrs ago

MEK, some PCBs, Epoxy accelerants, cleaning solvents, and some scent " enhancers ". To the point of passing out respiratory and migraine type allergic reactions.
Came from years of constant exposure working in an industrial environment.

Considering how many kids have grown up with constant complex chemical enhancement, it's not surprising there's an increase of allergic reaction to supposedly simple or common components of modern life.

jmbar2

(7,545 posts)
42. You've got me thinking...
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 01:03 PM
3 hrs ago

Length of prior exposure to chemicals could be a factor. I grew up in Houston, and a lot of my adult career was working for the oil & gas industry. I wasn't close to the refineries very often, but they definitely affected Houston's air at times.

A big part of safety training was following regulations on Exposure Limits to various chemicals. There were different levels of exposure limits to be able to safely endure a specific substance without experiencing any adverse health effects.
-Occupational Exposure Limit (OEL)
-Threshold Limit Value (TLV) Max exposure over a lifetime
-Recommended Exposure Limit (REL)
-Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL)
-Time-Weighted Average (TWA)
-Short Term Exposure Limit (STEL)
-Ceiling Exposure Value (CEV)
https://surehire.com/blog/2023/07/05/7-essential-exposure-limit-terms-that-all-employers-should-understand/#:~:text=A%20TWA%20exposure%20limit%20uses,Term%20Exposure%20Value%20(STEV).

These limits are supposed to be determined by rigorous testing. However, the perfume industry is exempt from this testing. Makes me think that prior chemical exposures might indeed contribute to reactions to chemicals in perfumes, but there is no science on it.

femmedem

(8,535 posts)
49. There is plenty of evidence that fragrances lower air quality and pose health risks.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 01:48 PM
2 hrs ago
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10051690/#:~:text=However%2C%20because%20fragrances%20and%20formula,and%20negatively%20affecting%20human%20health.

Even in baby products! From the linked article:
In a study of 42 fragranced baby products, over six hundred emitted VOCs were detected, of which approximately one-third are potentially hazardous. These VOCs comprised different chemical classes but predominated the fragrance compounds limonene, α-pinene, linalool, β-myrcene β-pinene, and acetaldehyde (additive/fragrance), and the solvents (ethanol, acetone).

And even in products labeled as green or natural:
"...For instance, Potera [48] pointed out that “Scented Products Emit a Bouquet of VOCs”, with over a hundred VOCs found in dozens of “green”, “natural”, or “organic” PCHPs, of which more than twenty of them classified as “toxic” or “hazardous”, but none disclosed on products labels, except for one product. The most frequent VOCs found were terpenes (limonene, α- and β-pinene), ethanol, acetone, and carcinogenic chemicals like acetaldehyde, 1,4-dioxane, formaldehyde, or methylene chloride. In an experimental determination with cleaning products and air fresheners containing terpenoids and glycol ethers in a ventilated controlled 50 m3 room, the concentrations of d-limonene, dihydromyrcenol, linalool, linalyl acetate, and beta-citronellol emitted were several times higher (~35–180 mg/day during three days) than the air (average air concentration ~30–160 μg/m3) when the products were in use [34]. Glycol ethers are regulated toxic air contaminants, and terpenes can react with ozone to form secondary pollutants."

stopdiggin

(14,929 posts)
52. the question isn't whether fragrence(s) are 'detectible' (Duh!)
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 02:07 PM
2 hrs ago

The question centers around whether these traces are lowering quality of life (or, as is being bruited about in places on this thread - actually endangering) large swaths of the human population. And there is very, very little evidence for that. While a competing great deal of evidence exists that we have been using 'fragrances' - to both esthetic and concrete benefit - for a long, long time.

It kind of boils down to - if you don't like scented dish washing soap (or shampoo) - that's fine, then avoid them. But the idea that it is incumbent on me to stop using them (or they should be banned from the marketplace) - because of your preference ... Doesn't really stand.

stopdiggin

(14,929 posts)
59. no. nor would I have any expectation that other people were going to stop using/consuming them
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 04:05 PM
18 min ago

or that they would (or should) be removed from the marketplace.

But thanks for providing a very concrete and apt analogy - where one thing does not beget the other.

Ms. Toad

(38,099 posts)
31. I have literally never been to a clinic, school, hospital, theater, or office
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:13 PM
4 hrs ago

Which bans scents.

I have many friends who are sensitive, so it is something I encounter regularly - so it isn't that I am oblivious to the concept. The only place I go regularly which is fragrance-free is a week-long gathering which takes place on a different college campus each year. None of these schools are fragrance-free before we arrive, and all return to their fragranced state when we leave. One of the jobs is the advance team is to distribute fragrance-free soap to all bathrooms in the portion of the campus we are in using, and to remove the fragranced soaps - it if they can't be removed to post signs that remind members of the community not to use them.

Off the top of my head, I can name 8 states from coast to coast where we've been, so it isn't just that my state doesn't ban fragrances in its schools.

femmedem

(8,535 posts)
50. My dentist's office has a sign at the entrance saying it's a fragrance-free office
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 01:49 PM
2 hrs ago

and requesting that people not use scented products before coming in.

womanofthehills

(10,692 posts)
60. When I was in the hospital for surgery fo a broken leg
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 04:07 PM
16 min ago

A nurse came into my room with so much perfume I instantly felt my throat tighten - I called desk and complained and requested a different nurse. No problem - she never came in my room again.

femmedem

(8,535 posts)
35. My husband has asthma. The last time we visited a local gallery we had to leave
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:33 PM
3 hrs ago

because of someone's perfume that lingered in any room she passed through. He's had to go to ER three times in the last few months because of his inability to breathe.

And scented products trigger migraines for me.

Laundry products are particularly bad. I bought a secondhand sweater online and haven't been able to wear it because it arrived scented with something that hasn't faded after washing it several times and letting it air out for several months.

womanofthehills

(10,692 posts)
56. Wrong - so many people now have sensitivity to even tiny scents
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 03:48 PM
35 min ago

Many people now have multiple chemical sensitivity where a tiny perfume scent in a closed car can send them into an anaphylactic reaction. I am one of them.

For me - when my city unlawfully sprayed outlawed malathion for mosquitoes at night up and down streets for mosquitoes control 3 nights in a row -my whole neighborhood got sick and some of us got multiple chemical sensitivity. Organophosphate pesticides can mess with your bronchials causing cells to die,and reactive airway disease, mess with digestion and screw up your nervous system. I could not leave my house for almost a yr or any scents or smells like car exhaust could cause a reaction. I’f you search social media - thousands of people are on the chemical sensitivity sites.

I had to move way out in the country to recover 90%.

womanofthehills

(10,692 posts)
58. Since forever, most scents didn't have VOC's and lots of other toxic chemicals
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 04:00 PM
23 min ago

Just like how our food is now so adulterated and crap so are many cosmetics, perfumes etc. We are so screwed - putting toxic chemicals on our bodies and clothes.

bamagal62

(4,324 posts)
6. I buy unscented everything.
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 10:47 PM
17 hrs ago

Scented things break me out. Plus, I’m a super smeller. So, perfumes/scents overwhelm me.

womanofthehills

(10,692 posts)
63. I had bad multiple chemical sensitivity for yrs
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 04:17 PM
6 min ago

Unable to even walk down the detergent aisle at a grocery store. People with MCS have enhanced sense of smell. I think it might be a body warning system. When people with Covid could not smell - it made wonder why people with MCS had the opposite-enhanced smell. Having enhanced smell was weird - I could even tell women who were menstruating. As I improved, my smell turned to normal.

Bev54

(13,156 posts)
7. Agree completely, from someone who is allergic to many cheap perfumes and colognes.
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 11:10 PM
17 hrs ago

It is really difficult sometimes as they wear so much it lingers after they are long gone. I can't even go into some drug stores as they make you walk through the cosmetic section to get to the rest of the store.

Morbius

(873 posts)
8. It's kind of pricey, too.
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 11:20 PM
17 hrs ago

I think it's just another way to separate fools from their money. It isn't necessary. Clothes that are clean don't smell bad. Clothes that aren't clean aren't going to smell nice no matter how much one spends on washing additives.

Ms. Toad

(38,099 posts)
29. Actually, you have to pay more for unscented products.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 11:59 AM
4 hrs ago

I'm in a community that is attentive to scents once a year, so I have to have supplies for the week that are fragrance- and scent-masking-free. Those products are considerably more expensive than what I normally use.

Same with unbleached flour.

They charge you more not to add the extra ingredient or take the extra step.

Marie Marie

(10,848 posts)
10. I stand in the laundry aisle and open every type of product I want to buy and smell it.
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 11:22 PM
17 hrs ago

I do like a scent IF it is fresh smelling, faint, subtle and not overpowering. Some products even have a "meter" with scent strength printed on the box.

summer_in_TX

(4,017 posts)
11. We have lots of chemically sensitive people in our community because it wasn't used for farming.
Wed Dec 24, 2025, 11:26 PM
16 hrs ago

So it never had fertilizers or pesticides applied. Our friend Patsy moved here from Houston after she became ill from the petrochemicals so prevalent in Houston (her husband was in the oil and gas industry). Once she got well enough to do so, she joined our church and became active in it.

A lovely, brilliant human being. We learned so much about what before was routine. Perfumes were out, although essential oils were okay. But I didn't care enough about it to risk it for her. We learned to hang our dry cleaning out to air for days before we wore it anywhere around her, and to use unscented laundry detergent as well as organic household cleaners. We switched to using white vinegar for the most part.

Once we got used to paying attention to chemical odors, I realized that I myself would instantly switch from feeling in tip top shape to not feeling great in the presence of certain chemicals. Patsy has been gone some twenty years, but we have never resumed using anything that could be toxic.

Our church built an enclosed room with a separate air system when we built our new sanctuary so that others would be able to come to services without being exposed to harmful chemicals. Those who come can be safe and see and hear everything through floor to ceiling glass walls.

jmbar2

(7,545 posts)
17. Wow - what a wonderful church to construct such a safe space
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:52 AM
15 hrs ago

I lived most of my life in Houston. Maybe that had something to do with my later sensitivities as well.

Rhiannon12866

(249,381 posts)
12. I have asthma and when my mother went out someplace special, she always wore perfume
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:01 AM
16 hrs ago

So if I rode in the car with her it affected me a lot.

James48

(5,076 posts)
14. I'm very sensitive to scents
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:22 AM
16 hrs ago

I was in a hotel yesterday. I think they use some kind of scented powder on the carpeting. It’s so strong I can TASTE the scent of that kind of perfumed scent.

If it is strong, I gag really bad. Even had to have special care with scented talcum or body powder.

Intractable

(1,576 posts)
15. I was allergic to my fifth grade teacher.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:28 AM
15 hrs ago

It was the perfume.

In my retirement community, at the "shows," there's always someone in the audience with too much perfume.

That's one reason I stopped going. The other reason is that they are never any good!

CTyankee

(67,740 posts)
16. Remember sachet? It was put in with your clothes in a drawer. Nice, light scent, not overdone....
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:39 AM
15 hrs ago

jmowreader

(52,872 posts)
21. "Scent" laundering has a very long history
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 09:26 AM
6 hrs ago

Back in the day, adding lavender to your rinse water was considered the height of luxury.

Nittersing

(8,075 posts)
22. I don't have sensitivities, nor am I a "super-smeller"
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 09:49 AM
6 hrs ago

but just walking down the detergent aisle, it's overpowering. And now, in our store, you have to wait around for a clerk to come and unlock it.

Irish_Dem

(79,416 posts)
26. I agree, for people with allergies it can become unbearable and detrimental to their health.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 11:50 AM
4 hrs ago

I bought some scented laundry soap and garbage bags by mistake.
And had to give them away.
They were making me ill.

ProfessorGAC

(75,711 posts)
27. What Trend Are You Talking About?
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 11:55 AM
4 hrs ago

There have been unscented variants of household products since early in my career, so we're talking over 40 years.
But, the vast majority of those products have been scented.
Some more than others; even to the point of objectionable.
But, there was no "trend" in industry to eliminate fragrances for health issues.
In fact, there's questionable science behind the claims in your OP.
Most fragrances have an olfactory thresholds far below the level that pose a health risk to all but a tiny fraction of the population.
There's a difference between annoying & irritating, and an even bigger difference between irritating & health risk.
You don't like too much fragrance? I get it. I'm not nuts about most of them myself.
But, your reasons seem misplaced & your making claims that just aren't accurate.

Mossfern

(4,602 posts)
34. I don't agree
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:27 PM
3 hrs ago

For me it's not about not liking a particular scent. Most perfumes and scented products give me a horrendous headache. I have the feeling that it's not the "smell" at all, but most likely some sort of chemical fixative that's added to the scent.

I have no issue with essential oils and there are a few toilet waters that I can tolerate.
We use unscented laundry products in our household.

The best perfume there is, is fresh air and sunshine.
I washed diapers when my kids were babies and hung them out on the line to dry.
Folding diapers became one of my most favorite "chores" because of that wonderful fragrance.

It's a very cruel lie when products are labeled with such false advertising that the scent is something like "fresh linen."
Perhaps it's not merely allergies to fragrances, but sensitivities to chemicals used to fix those scents.

I am not sensitive to many scented soaps - as a matter of fact Yardley's Lavender soap is my favorite. It reminds me of my childhood when my mom would put lavender sachets in our dresser drawers.

Response to Mossfern (Reply #34)

Mossfern

(4,602 posts)
51. Did somebody say something mean?
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 02:05 PM
2 hrs ago

I didn't catch the reply.


I didn't think there was anything offensive about my post.

Ziggysmom

(4,020 posts)
28. Wool dryer balls are awesome and work better for me than dryer sheets with no odor, static
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 11:56 AM
4 hrs ago

and less wrinkling. To each his own 😊. I do like a natural lavender scent but don’t like Gain or detergent scents.

Niagara

(11,392 posts)
37. I use wool dryer balls
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:35 PM
3 hrs ago

What I like about them:


No sneeze inducing scents, drying loads takes way less time in the dryer (as long as the wool balls behave), eco-friendly, natural and chemical free laundry helper.



What I dislike about them:


When they misbehave and get caught into the corners of a fitted bed sheet or get stuck in pants or arm sleeves. Also, When I take a load out of the dryer and the balls come out with the load and roll down the floor and I have to chase it down.


I still have a bit of clothing static to deal with in the winter months with wool dryer balls but it's not terrible. These balls are still way better than laundry softener and sheets.

Ziggysmom

(4,020 posts)
48. I experience the same misbehaving with mine. Also my cats love them! They steal them
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 01:38 PM
2 hrs ago

and hide away and nibble & drool on them LOL

hvn_nbr_2

(6,746 posts)
30. Off topic but tangential: scented and flavored dental floss
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:10 PM
4 hrs ago

Why in the world does dental floss have to have mint flavor? I floss to get stuff out of my mouth, not to put flavors into my mouth.

QED

(3,245 posts)
32. I had a bad skin reaction to scented dryer sheets.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:16 PM
4 hrs ago

Since then, I use unscented detergent and fabric softener. I was using white vinegar as a fabric softener - not sure why I stopped using it. It worked fine and is inexpensive. I also use unscented soaps and lotions.

BootinUp

(50,811 posts)
39. I sincerely doubt that venting about it will have any lasting impact.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:43 PM
3 hrs ago

But knock yourself out.

Blues Heron

(8,259 posts)
41. It's gross. Thankfully more and more people are going free and clear. Unscented options are the way to go.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:55 PM
3 hrs ago

The worst is if the person before you used that nasty scented crap and then it gets all over your clothes.

GoCubsGo

(34,638 posts)
61. It was way worse when powdered detergents were common.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 04:15 PM
8 min ago

I couldn't even walk down the laundry aisle in the grocery store without my eyes watering, and without a headache. I don't understand the need to perfume one's laundry, either. I suspect it's part of the whole marketing trend that has everyone convinced that they stink, and that it needs to be covered up. Hence the Lume/Mando and other "whole body" deodorants, etc. trend, among others.

mamacita75

(171 posts)
62. Scenting everything!
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 04:15 PM
8 min ago

I have wondered by the 33-gallon trash bags are being scented. It is just outdoor trash and yardwork I put in them, and the smell is unpleasant.

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