If you mean Ivory, like the dishwashing soap, no it can't. It will bubble way up and out of the washer, personal experience.
The mixing process used in making Ivory Soap adds air into the bar, reducing its density and making it less dense than water.
In the processing of Ivory Soap it is whipped (crunched is the term used in the soap business) so that the soap contains small air bubbles. The air bubbles lower the density of the soap to less than that of water so the soap floats.Aside: The invention of Ivory soap was an accident when a worker crunched a batch too long. The resulting frothy mixture was though to be a failure until the ad-men thought out a program describing it asa desirable quality - "So pure, it floats"
Ivory
Ivory soap I would suggest you should go for something natural. Even I used to ask for such kind of suggestions to everyone and following them I used almost every product in the market but none of them did no good. Then I called for handmade soap online from Nyassa and they are just superb. Try it.
Ivory used to make people lots of things!
Have you ever used homemade soap?It's a lot of work, and it is awfully harsh. It's simple and cheap to use Ivory. Using perfumed soaps like Dial or Irish Spring would be inappropriate.
I did a soap carving of a scarab beetle today. I have a simple way to do this... 1. Get a bar of soap. ( I used Irish Spring a practice, Ivory is perfect) 2. There are many tools you can use. I use plastic forks , spoons, and plastic knifes with serrated edges. and toothpicks. There are others, but these are safe alternatives. 3. choose a pattern. 4. whittle away the outside ... 5. DO NOT SOAK SOAP IN WARM WATER FOR MORE THAN 30 SECS. UNLESS YOU WANT A SOAPY PILE OF CRUD!!! 6. add detail to the carving.
Soap is man made although there are plants and oils that have been used in place of soap in the past. Most soap made today has a base of lye with other ingredients added in.
Curved bars are less likely to break off their corners. From a profit standpoint, curved bars contain slightly less soap than completely rectangular bars with the same dimensions. Bars with sharp corners (e.g. Ivory Soap) are quickly rounded off anyway when used.
they used ivory for boxes and caskets today we use ivory for piano keys
The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.
Strigils were scrapers. A person would be oiled up and then the strigil was used to scrape off the oil and dirt. The Romans used oil in place of our soap, although soap was known.