Toxin , Material
Posted: 2015 Aug 16, 20:14
For reviewers and makers,
I would like to know what materials the sex toys are constructed with. Potential customers want to know for reasons such as health, safety, feeling, durability. Simply writing that your product has those attributes without providing information which allows them to infer those qualities would be unconvincing. Tell whether they use harmful preservatives, such as parabens. Tell whether they use perfumes/aromas. If so, provide the necessary information about them. I'm going to pick items where I am provided better information about materials.
I'm sure there are other concerned customers as well.
A Green Peace sponsored study on sex toys
showed 7 of 8 tested toys had high amounts of pthalates, up to half the mass of the toy. We want to know whether we stick our reproductive organs in something teratogenic or which disrupts hormones.
Makers, if you want to inspire as much confidence as possible, get it approved as a medical device by state agencies. Your device would then have another unique marketing feature, since none of the competition has done this.
Also, please include information about at what temperature, the materials start to degrade and if thermoplastic, at what temperature it melts. One reason, is because we wish to heat the toys. If it can handle the temperature of boiling water at the altitude of Death Valley, then most of us won't need more detail than that -- though some people like to do modifications or repairs and then wish to use more heat than that.
I would like to know what materials the sex toys are constructed with. Potential customers want to know for reasons such as health, safety, feeling, durability. Simply writing that your product has those attributes without providing information which allows them to infer those qualities would be unconvincing. Tell whether they use harmful preservatives, such as parabens. Tell whether they use perfumes/aromas. If so, provide the necessary information about them. I'm going to pick items where I am provided better information about materials.
I'm sure there are other concerned customers as well.
A Green Peace sponsored study on sex toys
showed 7 of 8 tested toys had high amounts of pthalates, up to half the mass of the toy. We want to know whether we stick our reproductive organs in something teratogenic or which disrupts hormones.
Makers, if you want to inspire as much confidence as possible, get it approved as a medical device by state agencies. Your device would then have another unique marketing feature, since none of the competition has done this.
Also, please include information about at what temperature, the materials start to degrade and if thermoplastic, at what temperature it melts. One reason, is because we wish to heat the toys. If it can handle the temperature of boiling water at the altitude of Death Valley, then most of us won't need more detail than that -- though some people like to do modifications or repairs and then wish to use more heat than that.