Floss Pick - Tongue Scraper - Charcoal
Say hello to our new plant-based floss picks. They're made mainly from cornstarch and have a minty double thread to easily clean away food bits.
Say hello to our new plant-based floss picks. They're made mainly from cornstarch and have a minty double thread to easily clean away food bits.
Made out of non-gmo corn starch with a nylon flouride-free thread coated with plant-based wax with xylitol
Made out of non-gmo corn starch with a nylon flouride-free thread coated with plant-based wax with xylitol
1. Insert: Gently slide the floss between your teeth.
2. Move: Curve the floss around each tooth and move it up and down.
3. Clean: Repeat for each tooth.
1. Insert: Gently slide the floss between your teeth.
2. Move: Curve the floss around each tooth and move it up and down.
3. Clean: Repeat for each tooth.
Floss Pick - Tongue Scraper - Charcoal
Say hello to our new plant-based floss picks. They're made mainly from cornstarch and have a minty double thread to easily clean away food bits.
Say hello to our new plant-based floss picks. They're made mainly from cornstarch and have a minty double thread to easily clean away food bits.
Made out of non-gmo corn starch with a nylon flouride-free thread coated with plant-based wax with xylitol
Made out of non-gmo corn starch with a nylon flouride-free thread coated with plant-based wax with xylitol
1. Insert: Gently slide the floss between your teeth.
2. Move: Curve the floss around each tooth and move it up and down.
3. Clean: Repeat for each tooth.
1. Insert: Gently slide the floss between your teeth.
2. Move: Curve the floss around each tooth and move it up and down.
3. Clean: Repeat for each tooth.
Did you know?
Every year, more than 1 billion plastic items like toothpaste tubes, toothbrushes, floss, and mouthwash bottles end up in landfills and oceans. Plastic production is expected to increase by 40% over the next decade. If we don't take action against the plastic pollution, our oceans could contain more plastic than fish (by weight) by 2050. This plastic often gets ingested by fish, which means it can end up in our food, salt, and drinking water.