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Lava is a heavy-duty hand cleaner in soap bar form manufactured by the WD-40 Company. Unlike typical soap bars, Lava contains ground pumice, which gave the soap its name. The soap and pumice combination is intended to scour tar, engine grease, paint, dirt, grime, filth, and similar substances from the skin. The original Lava soap (without ...
Floor covering, [22] originally coined by Frederick Walton in 1864, and ruled as generic following a lawsuit for trademark infringement in 1878; probably the first product name to become a generic term. [23] Lyocell Originally a brand name owned by Lenzing, an austrian based company, for a viscose-type fiber fabricated via the NMMO process.
Its marketing catchphrase is "The Eye Opener!" Originally a bar soap, the company also began to produce body wash in 2003. [1] In 1977 Procter & Gamble launched the Coast formula under the Zest brand name in France, followed by Italy and the UK in 1982. Like US Coast, the European version had the same perfume and was marbled, but colored yellow ...
Lestoil – a heavy-duty multi-purpose cleanser product; Liquid-Plumr; Monkey Brand – a soap introduced in the 1880s as a household scouring and polishing soap, in cake/bar form; Mr Sheen; Mrs. Stewart's Bluing – a brand of fabric bluing agent first marketed in 1883 that whitens fabrics with a proprietary blue dye, primarily made of blue ...
Palmolive is an American multinational brand of a line of products produced by Colgate-Palmolive. The Palmolive brand grew from one product, Palmolive bar soap. Made of coconut, palm and olive oils, Palmolive bar soap was introduced in 1898. Originally, the bar soap floated like Procter & Gamble's Ivory bar soap. By the turn of the 20th century ...
The name is a play on words in Spanish; Jabón-Zote, the -ote suffix emphasizing a large size. [5] The soap is produced at the Fábrica de Jabón La Corona in Ecatepec, Mexico State. [1] Most of the brand's sales are domestic, with 15% of sales outside of Mexico, primarily in the United States and South America. [5]
The logo of Camay used in 2006-2012. Camay is a British brand of bar soap owned by Unilever.It was introduced in 1926 by Procter & Gamble and was marketed as a "white, pure soap for women," as many soaps of the time were colored to mask impurities.