Milk & Honey Acres

Milk & Honey Acres

Anna Edgington

Goat’s Milk Soap

Handcrafted in small batches by Anna Edgington using milk from their own herd of Nubian goats and buttermilk from their Jersey cow, this line of artisan Goat’s Milk soap is truly a marvel…

No chemicals. No preservatives. Just good, simple, wholesome ingredients to conquer dirt and nourish your skin! With no nasty ingredients like sodium laurel sulfate, parabens, and pthalates, these soaps are eco-friendly, sustainable and safe. They don’t contain fillers, preservatives, or synthetic lathering agents, instead they naturally moisturize, cleanse, and lather, with no synthetics needed!

Available in a variety of scents and blends consisting of all natural products that combined via Anna’s carefully crafted recipes make for a beautiful, delicious smelling bar of soap that you’ll be delighted with.

Treat yourself to nourishing and long-lasting handcrafted soap that's fun to use and gentle on your skin!

Artist Statement: I am a Master Herbalist graduate of the School of Natural Healing in Springville, Utah. I teach herb classes, host herb walks, and love to incorporate herbs into other ingredients, whether it be soap making or cooking.

Soap making is something I truly enjoy, but I also enjoy spinning- turning wool, alpaca, and other fibers into useful articles. Because of this I became a member of the Malabar Farm Spinning and Weaving Guild.

In addition to herbs, soap making and spinning, I enjoy knitting, gardening, cooking, canning, and working with animals, using the herbal knowledge I’ve gained to keep the animals on our family farm healthy so that antibiotics and vaccinations aren’t needed.

-Anna Edgington

Anna lives near Loudonville, Ohio. She is actively involved in day to day operations on the family farm, where she resides with her parents and two sisters.


Heidi Edgington

Traditional Weaving

Artist Statement: I began weaving in 2014 when my great-aunt gave me a Union floor loom. I began figuring out how the loom worked, warping it up with the tangled threads that were hanging from it, and so began my first project- a table runner. I decided weaving was something I enjoyed and wanted to learn more about, so I joined the Malabar Farm Spinning and Weaving Guild. I have since weaved many projects on that first loom and have added two more floor looms, both with four harnesses, giving me the ability to do more intricate patterns. I weave primarily with cotton, making rugs, place mats, table runners, coasters, scarves, and blankets.

The bags are my favorite to weave because no two are alike and I can be creative with them. The handles of the bags are actually woven in and won’t pull out, making the bags very versatile. They come in a wide array of color combinations and designs.

The rugs can be made in any size or color, with regular fringe, twisted fringe, or no fringe at all.

-Heidi Edgington

Heidi lives near Loudonville, Ohio. She is actively involved in day to day operations on the family farm, where she resides with her parents and two sisters.

Product available at Gallery.