What are Loofahs Made Of
What are Loofahs Made Of: Bath time, spa experiences,and
even common household chores just wouldn’t be the same without the humblesponge.Sponges, mostly from class Demospongiae, have been sold commercially as
cleansing aids for thousands of years,and have also been used as water filters,
padding for soldiers’ helmets, and for painting and decorating.
Although naturalloofah sponge resemble their bathroom counterparts,they’re actually about as unrelated as it’s possible to be.The loofah you scrub with is a dried-out tropical or subtropical gourd belonging to genus Luffa(most often either species L. aegyptiaca or L. acutangula). And while no one is completely sure where it originated—as W.M. Porterfield wrote in a 1955 Economic Botany article:
These plants—which look a bit like giant cucumbers—grow year-round in almost any tropical climate and places that have warm seasons,so long as there is plenty of moisture and no risk of frost.Like sponges, the fibrous dried luffa has likely been used in Egypt and Asia for up to a couple thousand years.But its biggest boost as a cleansing tool began in the early 1890s,
(Prior to that, luffas were mostly used when a thorough
household scrubbing was in order.)
Word spread about the exfoliating item just as bathing suits
and hemlines began retreating in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries,according to The New York Times Magazine, which left many women
newfound anxiety about the smoothness of their skin.Inventions like the
Improved Bathing Mitten, patented in 1889 by Judson S. Snyder of Brooklyn, New
York, transformed the large gourds into easier-to-handle versions. By 1893, “no
one seemed able to agree on how to spell the name of that sponge,but it
inspired such a craze [that one] expected to see ‘a ‘loafer,’ ‘luphar,’ a
‘loopa’ or a ‘loofah’ in every wash basin the land,” according to that same New
York Times Magazine article. More
After wartime conflict drove Western powers to start sourcing their luffa shipments elsewhere,the dried veggies continued to prove useful through the mid-20th century as an effective sound-proofing material for tanks, helmets, and certain kinds of buildings.
When man-made materials began taking over many industrial roles in the 20th century, he noble luffa was mostly returned to its role as a cleaning tool—and, of course, a popular food,one that easily stands in for cucumbers or summer squash while it’s still immature.
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