Welcome to
Friends of 2 Rivers

A citizens' organization committed to promoting a safe, healthy and enriching environment for the communities at the confluence of the Clark Fork and Blackfoot Rivers.

Linda WhiteThe Healthy Naturals


It all started with soap!  Linda White has been making soap for almost thirty years. After retiring from her day job in 2008, she started selling her soap locally at markets and fairs.  The Healthy Soap Company was born and blossomed into a small batch manufacturing company.  Known for her beautifully marbled and colorful, large-sized bars, customers returned over and over, saying this was the best soap they had ever used.  Linda considered master batching, but eventually chose not to -- batching 100+ pounds of soap was too restrictive for her personal touches.  Hiring and training an assistant gave Linda time to really experiment with recipes, colorants, additives and patterns.  Life was all about soap!

Homemade soap need not be plain, beige or boring.  Linda’s individually crafted batches of soap are aromatic, feel luscious on your skin, and beautify your bathroom.  Using unique combinations of herbs, all-natural colorants, juices, milks, natural additives and scents that last the life of the bar, her soaps pamper every sense.    She does this without compromising the soap’s health benefits for your skin.

The skin is our largest organ and soap can feed the skin.  Healthy Naturals soaps contain nourishing ingredients to exfoliate, clean, soften and rebalance the skin’s Ph naturally getting rid of dry, oily, blemished or broken skin!   Linda believes that every home should use natural soap and skin care products, getting back to the basics of knowing what ingredients are in the products we use on our body. 

Believing that what you put on your skin enters the blood stream, Linda saw quality body care as a health issue.  Becoming more concerned about the Ph balance of people's skin, Linda discouraged customers from using any products that contained potentially harmful chemicals.  Customers were complaining more about having roshea, exzemas, blemishes starting later in life and serious discoloration.  These concerns, plus extra time in retirement, prompted Linda to create a line of natural face creams, body lotions, lip butters, scrubs and more.  Almost as if being given an agenda, it was a seamless road to travel into making other products.

Her customers’ needs were apparent through their requests and suggestions.  Linda set out to provide them with what was necessary to help the health of their skin.  Business needs such as labels, containers and marketing were an interruption to Linda as she studied and researched.  One day, her sister Laurie designed some labels for the creams Linda was preparing for a weekend fair.  Feeling she could not use The Healthy Soap Company name for creams, Laurie named them Linda's Healthy Naturals.  Linda’s two product names eventually merged to become The Healthy Naturals company.

At first, Linda was surprised her new creams and lotions were so popular.  Then she looked at what was available commercially and understood – she could not find truly all natural creams and lotions on the market.   Linda’s philosophy is that nothing should be put on your body that is not organic or as natural as possible.  Believing that many large cosmetic company products are too expensive and contain chemicals that may actually harm your skin, The Healthy Naturals provides a reasonably priced alternative.  
While Linda promotes her products as natural, basic skin care, they are much more.  Her creativity in combining skin-healthy oils and additives in her creams and lotions is truly wonderful.  Linda does not just make one recipe -- she customizes products for individual skin types and uses all high quality food grade ingredients.  She does all this while providing very reasonable pricing. 

After developing her line of body care products, and after numerous requests, Linda began teaching others the “how to” of soap making.  This led to a complete line of classes for making all the body care products.  Many of Linda's students are now making and selling products.    Linda is frequently asked “Why create competition for your own business?”   Linda believes that getting back to the basics is primary, she sees education as a huge need.  Many people attending her classes have no idea what ingredients are in cosmetics.  She endeavors to educate people and promote overall good health. 

Linda’s classes:   * Soap Making  * Advanced Soap Making * Creams and Lotions * Bath and Body Basics * Body Butters & Balms * Natural Baby Care * Developing your Essential Oils Medicine Cabinet * Natural Perfumery * Mineral Make-up.

She jokes about the make-up class, as Linda has never worn make-up.  When asked to develop a mineral make-up class, she groaned.  After studying this area, Linda was pleasantly surprised to find out that many minerals from the earth, although inert, are actually quite healthy, pulling toxins from the pores and giving UV rays / sun screen protection.   

Linda is watching customers look younger and is listening to quality testimonials.  Dr. Bethany Chernich is using her cream on her little boy who has eczema.  Dr. Christine White (no relation) personally uses her Mature Woman Cream and carries all of Linda's products in her office.  Others rave about their new skin after using Linda's Healthy Naturals.  If you ask Linda's about it, she’s amazed with the popularity of her products. 

Linda credits the people of Missoula and all her students for being well educated and intelligent.  They challenge her continually with questions and requests for custom formulations.  Her products evolve and improve because of questions and requests that come from her customers.  It is truly the fountain of youth and yet so simple.   You are welcome to dive in!

Contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.at Linda's Healthy Naturals or The Healthy Soap Company


view more Soap

HOOKed on Art Home Page

Senta SandberuSenta enjoys painting the outdoors while her family hunts and fishes throughout Montana, Oregon and Idaho.

Growing up in Eastern Oregon gave her an appreciation for rural existence. Wildlife, landscapes, ranch life and flowers are common themes in her watercolor and oil paintings.
Senta's unique style has developed from her love of nature and color. An abstract use of shades, shaped and white space give her paintings their own character.

She has become a popular local artist at the Peoples' Market in Missoula as well as at HOOKed on Art.


Back

Hooked on Art Home

melissa-clarkMelissa works predominantly with gouache paint, which lends itself to bright and unexpected colors. She enjoys experimenting with all types of art, and is always trying something new. The objective of her art is to create something that is different and uniquely attractive.


Her work has been exhibited as a part of First Friday Gallery Night in 2009.

-

This is Melissa's second year as an artist at Hooked on Art.

 


view more Watercolors

Hooked on Art Home

Marjorie HarperWhen Marjorie moved from Charlo, Montana (population 100) to Kansas City, she began her formal art training at the Kansas City Art Institute. Her father, a self-taught naturalist and well known Montana taxidermist, had been her primary teacher and mentor. At the Kansas City Art Institute she would use pencils, oils and, ultimately, watercolors to perfect her interpretations of Montana's landscapes and animals. A move to Denver allowed her to study sculpture with Cowboy Artist Fritz White and again create her visions of Montana animals.

Returning to Missoula in 1976, Marjorie pursued her passions for watercolor, wildlife and horses. Marjorie organized the Montana Dressage & Combined Training Association and the Five Valley's Pony Club. She is a founding member of the Montana Watercolor Society. These organizations helped develop her distinctive watercolor palate for favorite Montana subjects: horses, mules, children and wildlife. Majorie's goal is to paint the perfect horse that gallops off the canvas or the coyote that stalks through the waving grass and tempts the viewer to touch it.

Marjorie has received several awards in the MTWS National Water Media Shows, and was awarded signature membership in 2004. She has been juried into numerous shows and her paintings and sculptures are in private and public collections throughout the West.

Majorie Harper Art: (406) 258-6467 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


view more Watercolors

Hooked on Art Home

Join Our Mailing List

* indicates required

 

Friends of Two Rivers Facebook

 

Sustainable Living

Sustainable Living

Staying Involved

Staying Involved

Climate Change

Climate Change

 

Go to top