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(reported by Taiwan
Panorama, by: Chang Chiung-fang/tr. by Scott Williams)
A
bar of soap scented with
mugwort
from Changhua's Huatan Township and patchouli from Taipei's Jinshan Township
made with water from Yangmingshan's mountain springs does more than wash away
dirt-it soothes the soul.
"There are mountains all over Taiwan, and those mountains are covered with
herbs," says Chiang Jung-yuan. By distilling the best that this land has to
offer in a way that "hydrates" the Earth, its herbs, and its people, Chiang has
catapulted his Yuan Soap onto the global stage.
L'Occitane,
Crabtree Evelyn, Lush, The Body Shop... The market for personal-care products
is awash in more European and American brands than you can shake a loofah at,
yet Yuan Soap has managed to carve out a place for itself in just three years
with its handmade herbal soaps.
On a par with
international brands in terms of the price and quality, the company competes on
the basis of the purity and freshness of its "homegrown" products.
Pure
and natural
Everything about Yuan Soap reinforces the company's "natural" image: the
unadorned shape of the soaps themselves, the open, unprepossessing decor of the
company's Danshui workshop and Jinshan factory, even the scruffy look of
company founder Chiang Jung-yuan.
Though
Yuan Soap plugs itself as a local brand, it sells its products at
"international prices." Where an ordinary bar of soap goes for under NT$20,
Yuan's locally manufactured soaps sell for NT$200-300 per bar.
In
2008, Yuan's "Flowers in a Mirror, Moon in Water"-two pieces of soap in the
shape of the moon made from Taiwanese honey, flaxseed oil, and shell-ginger
leaves in a ceramic soap dish made in Yingge-won a competition for innovations
in mooncakes. Yuan retailed the soap set for NT$1,500.
Chiang
Jung-yuan was the first Taiwanese entrepreneur to succeed in elevating locally
manufactured soaps to such heights. Chiang established the Ah Yuan Workshop in
May 2005 to produce pure, natural, hand-made soaps, never imagining that it
would grow from its original four-person team to its current 64-person
workforce.
Clean
body, clean mind
For Chiang, soap making was initially an excuse to withdraw from the world and
"cleanse"
his wounds.
"The Earth has feelings. Every living thing has a soul. Yet people denigrate
all of it all the time," laments Chiang. Reading between the lines, you can see
traces of an old injury underlying many of Chiang's words. After long years
organizing campaign events and writing promotional materials, he came to feel
that politicians and his "revolutionary" comrades in arms were
pretentious
and duplicitous. He left politics to spend time setting up cultural events all
over Taiwan before again realizing that he was sweating blood while other
people were taking the credit.
Giving up his career in middle age to wander the Earth, Chiang slowly
decompressed. But then all the pressures and problems that had built up inside
over the years manifested physically all at once. He developed eczema and
allergic rashes. His confidence in social situations plummeted as his skin
became dry, inflamed, blistered, and scabbed. He itched terribly whenever he
used a skincare product containing preservatives. Looking for a solution to his
skin problems, Chiang began studying Chinese herbal medicines and learned to
make his own soap. Establishing Yuan Soap was the natural result of putting
himself in other people's shoes. "Plants provide a kind of love and protection
that can
revitalize
our whole bodies," says Chiang.
There's
nothing mysterious about soap. It's basically oil, water, alkali salts and
additives. But few soapmakers invest the kind of time in it that Chiang has.
Yuan
soaps are made with pristine water from springs in
Yangmingshan
National Park
, edible oils (olive and coconut), and locally grown medicinal
plants, including chrysanthemums, tealeaves, lemon,
mugwort
and patchouli. The company's soaps are truly all natural, and contain no
chemical additives, like surfactants. The production of each handmade bar of
Yuan soap requires an 18-step 45-day process. Everything from growing and
harvesting the plants, extracting the water, pouring the oil, mixing, forming,
cold saponifying, extracting the soap from the molds, and air-drying it for 45
days to cutting and stamping the finished product is done by hand. The company
never adds paraffin to speed the hardening process, and never uses machines.
Yuan's
support for Taiwanese agriculture and his commitment to localism are inspiring.
With the exception of those items that simply are not produced in Taiwan, the
company sources everything it uses, regardless of the cost, from small
Taiwanese organic farms. For example, it pays NT$800 per catty (600 grams) for
chrysanthemums from Taitung rather than buying them from mainland China for
just NT$150 per catty. This is also true of the roselle it uses, which it
purchases from Hualien growers for NT$150 per catty rather than from the
mainland for NT$40 per catty.
Yuan's
insistence that all its products contain only pure extracts has had an indirect
impact on the growers that supply it with organic fruits and medicinal herbs.
It has also earned the company recognition from local farmers' associations,
the Society of Wilderness, and organic-produce dealers, who have, to Chiang's
delight, sought its help in organizing organic growing events. "I'm getting
happier and happier about what I'm doing," smiles Chiang.
Skin friendly
Given that Ah Yuan's products are natural, handmade herbal soaps, it's
essential that the company have an understanding of the cultivation and uses of
herbs.
In addition to working with organic growers all over Taiwan, Yuan has
established its own farms. After acquiring its first farm in Jinshan, the
company leased three hectares of terraces in Yangmingshan National Park in
2008. It now grows a variety of medicinal plants, herbs, and wildflowers,
including tea-oil camellia, lemon, mulberry, guava,
mugwort,
lantana, and patchouli, on land there that had been lying fallow for 20 years.
Because
the soaps have medicinal properties, Ah Yuan invests real time and effort in
their development. Chiang himself has a solid understanding of both Traditional
Chinese Medicine (TCM) and acupuncture, in part as a result of his family
background-his great grandfather and great uncle were both TCM doctors and his
grandfather was an herbalist.
Among
Yuan's many different products are lemon and patchouli soaps. Lemon has
antibacterial properties, helps remove old cells, lightens the skin, and
shrinks pores. Patchouli has long been used to
reduce inflammation,
for its cooling effect, to counteract poisons, and treat bruising, and is
therefore beneficial to people prone to pimples, acne,
housewife's dermatitis,
and skin allergies.
When
eaten, mung beans and Job's tears have cooling and diuretic effects. In soap,
they reduce freckling, smooth the skin, and act as an exfoliant. People who
suffer from eczema, prickly heat, and other conditions that cause itching for
unknown reasons find some relief in a Yuan soap made with colorful, fragrant
Asian puccoon and hibiscus, which contain skin-soothing allantion.
Chiang
is most pleased with his company's
mugwort
soap, which also happens to be its bestseller.
"There's
nothing special about adding
mugwort
to soap," says Chiang. "But no one does it as well as I do." He contends that
you have to use different extraction methods on different parts of the
mugwort-alcohol
for the roots, stewing in hot water for the stems, sun drying for the leaves,
and freeze drying for the shoots. He adds that
mugwort
works best in conjunction with green tea, which contains catechins and
anthocyanins that facilitate the action of the antioxidants in the
mugwort.
His
mugwort
soap, which also contains complementary ingredients such as green tea,
verbena,
and
lemongrass,
helps with irritating skin conditions like eczema, itching, and scaling.
Seeking
customers with taste
At Eslite's December 2005 opening ceremony for its Xinyi store, Yuan got to
place its soaps in a display counter by the main entrance. It posted great
numbers, and has since grown from sales of 200-plus bars per month to sales of
70-80,000 bars per month in 2008.
The
company has also been working with growing numbers of distributors. In addition
to retailing its products at six of its own locations, it offers them through
more than 400 sellers of organic goods. The company has even begun branching
out overseas, and now has agents in Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Beijing and
Shanghai.
Envious
peers remark that Chiang's background in advertising simply makes him a better
marketer. As a soapmaker, he's managed to hitch his products to the "LOHAS"
bandwagon and raise the profile of Taiwanese brands.
Chiang's
himself believes that timing has been the most important factor in Yuan's
success.
"Taiwanese society is in a
tumult,"
says Chiang. "People
are unsettled.
When there's too much freedom, there's a turn back to a kind of
restraint,
a desire to see things consolidated. What Yuan wants to offer people is
something calm and quiet." Chiang, who grabbed people's attention with his
claim that cleanliness was a kind of moral practice, says of Yuan's rise: "I
didn't build the stage. It was just happened to be empty and I jumped on it."
Though
there are few barriers to entry in the soap business, Yuan doesn't fear
copycats
or imitators. "I not only don't fear them," says Chiang, "I'd welcome them." He
explains that it took the growing popularity of martial arts films to produce
Tsui Hark, and the rise of Asia as a whole to bring fame to directors like
Zhang Yimou and Ang Lee. "Taiwan's land, waters, and consumers will all benefit
from more people making and using natural handmade soaps," he says. Doesn't he
fear losing market share? "You succeed or fail on the strength of your brand."
Chiang says that all he has to do is keep making good products.
Visiting
gifts
In fact, Yuan has already begun branching out, and growing from Yuan Soap into
Yuan Stores, and from Yuan Care to Yuan Lifestyle. To that end, it is rolling
out new Yuan products that draw on the good taste of Taiwan's people and the
flavors and scents available here.
Products currently in testing and soon to be released include shampoos, face
lotions, creams, and other skincare products. Yuan also signed contracts with
farmers in Tainan and Yilan for organic black beans and camellia seeds in 2008.
In preparation for a push into the manufacture of soy sauce, camellia oil, and
cane sugar, Chiang himself will travel to Thailand to learn to make sugar.
Chiang
says that he hopes that Yuan Stores' products come to be so well regarded that
they become representative of Taiwan, given to foreign visitors to our island
the way we currently give glassware, pineapple cakes, and Black Bridge
sausages.
One
hundred percent made in Taiwan, Ah Yuan wants not just to have a relationship
with the people of Taiwan, but to be something they are proud to gift to
others.
by:
Chang Chiung-fang/tr. by Scott Williams
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