The problem is remembering what you put in the wrap and to make sure you use it before it goes bad. I took a class and made these and both my husband and son don't like them as you can't see what's in them and have to unwrap them all the time. ... Also the lady that taught the class died recently.
@littlefirecracker1289 Жыл бұрын
For me the problem is that you shouldn't eat wax, which will seep a bit into your food when it touches it (like when she wrapped fruit)
@Nothing-dm8wq Жыл бұрын
The factory: yes i LOVE pollution
@anonymouswhite7957 Жыл бұрын
Unless i’m understanding this comment wrong... This is just melted beeswax absorbed through fabric? Beeswax are also biodegradable in normal condition (unlike most plastic polymers that usually requires heat, uv, enzymes, plastivores, etc.). Honestly the few things i can think of that contributes to pollution is the fabric itself (doubt that they manufactured it themselves either), the heating of the wax, the tools, and transport. They don’t even wrap the final product in plastic? Also this is why beeswax products aren’t perfect either. They melt easily and degrade overtime (much more bioavailable to other organism). They aren’t as versatile as manmade polymers, but footprint wise they are much much better.