Brands

Product categories

  • Innersense Hydrating Cream Hairbath & Conditioner Duo

    $137.00

    Brand: Innersense Organic Beauty

    BODYED Approved • Ingredient Conscious Formula
    Selected for its plant focused formulation approach, certified organic oil inclusion, and transparent ingredient disclosure. Designed as a moisture rich haircare system that prioritizes botanical emollients and silicone free conditioning while maintaining professional performance results. This is a fragrance containing, essential oil based formula intended for nourishment and styling support rather than a minimal or fragrance free system.

    Product: Hydrating Cream Hairbath & Conditioner Duo

  • Hydrating Hair Mask

    $30.00

    Brand: Innersense Organic Beauty

    BODYED Approved • Ingredient Conscious Formula
    Selected for its botanical heavy conditioning system, certified organic oil inclusion, and transparent ingredient disclosure. Designed as a moisture rich treatment mask that focuses on restoring softness and manageability through plant based emollients and protein support rather than silicone driven coating systems. This is a fragrance containing, performance focused formula intended to support hydration and repair rather than a minimal or fragrance free treatment.

    Product: Hydrating Hair Mask

  • Sweet Spirit Leave In Conditioner

    $28.00

    Brand: Innersense Organic Beauty

    BODYED Approved • Ingredient Conscious Formula
    Selected for its lightweight botanical conditioning system, certified organic aloe base, and transparent ingredient disclosure. Designed as a silicone free leave in treatment that supports detangling, hydration, and manageability through plant derived emollients and conditioning agents. This is a fragrance containing formula built around essential oils and botanical extracts rather than a minimal or fragrance free system.

    Product: Sweet Spirit Leave In Conditioner

  • I Create Lift Volumizing Foam

    $28.00

    Brand: Innersense Organic Beauty

    BODYED Approved • Ingredient Conscious Formula
    Selected for its plant powered volumizing system, aloe based hydration structure, and transparent ingredient disclosure. Designed as a lightweight styling foam that enhances lift, body, and texture through botanical extracts and natural film forming ingredients rather than heavy synthetic styling resins. This is a fragrance containing formula intended for flexible styling support rather than a minimal or fragrance free system.

    Product: I Create Lift Volumizing Foam

  • Pure Harmony Hairbath

    $30.00

    You said:
    So I have just like a sports bra for bodied. Should I put it underneath bras and then have a category under athletics for bras too? Because it doesn’t really hurt to have them in both areas.


    ChatGPT said:

    Yes and honestly for BODYED’s structure, putting it in both places is actually the smarter move as long as you do it intentionally.

    Here’s the clean logic:

    ✅ Primary category

    Put the sports bra under:

    Bras → Sports Bras (or Athletic Bras)

    Reason
    People who are shopping specifically for bras will go straight there first. That’s the strongest intent search.

    ✅ Secondary placement

    Also tag it under:

    Athletics → Tops or Athletics → Bras

    Reason
    Some people shop by activity, not by garment type. Especially with workout pieces, users think in “athletic outfits,” not “lingerie categories.”


    Why this works well for BODYED specifically

    You’re building a filter heavy, material focused site, not a traditional fashion store. So overlapping placement actually helps:

    • Better SEO internally
    • Easier filtering by lifestyle
    • More chances for discovery without adding new SKUs

    And since you’re already organizing by natural fiber plus stretch under 10 percent, this dual placement fits your system.


    The only rule to follow

    Do NOT duplicate the product listing itself.
    Just assign multiple categories or tags behind the scenes.

    Think of it like one product wearing two labels, not two separate products.


    If you want, I can also tell you the exact hierarchy I’d use for BODYED so it stays super clean long term because athletic bras can get messy fast once leggings and sets start coming in.


    You said:
    Yeah, that’s what I would do. I assign it to multiple areas. It’s one listing.


    ChatGPT said:

    Yep, you’re doing it exactly right.

    One listing
    Multiple category assignments

    That’s actually how bigger ecommerce sites structure things behind the scenes, especially when items live in both function based and product type shopping paths.

    For BODYED, your logic stays really clean if you think of it like this:

    Core Structure

    Garment Type = Primary home
    • Bras
    • Underwear
    • Tops
    • Bottoms
    • etc

    Lifestyle or Use = Secondary placement
    • Athletics
    • Sleep
    • Lounge
    • Everyday

    So your sports bra would look like:

    Primary
    Bras → Sports Bras

    Secondary
    Athletics → Bras or Athletics → Tops


    Why this matters long term for you specifically

    You’re building a filter first, material driven platform, not just a clothing store. People will browse in totally different ways:

    Some will think
    “I need a bra”

    Others will think
    “I want natural fiber workout clothes”

    Multiple category assignment lets both people find the same item without you creating duplicate listings or cluttering BODYED’s structure.

    And honestly, this also protects you later when you scale creators and affiliate links because it keeps analytics clean. One product, one URL, multiple discovery paths.

    If you want, I can map out how I’d future proof athletics now before you add leggings or sets because that’s usually where category chaos starts if it isn’t structured early.


    You said:
    Is plus 2x, or is that just extended sizes?


    ChatGPT said:

    Short answer
    2X can be plus size OR extended size depending on how YOU define your system.
    But based on what you told me you’re doing for BODYED, here’s the cleanest way to keep it consistent:


    ✅ What I recommend YOU follow (based on your current rules)

    Standard Sizes
    XS through XL

    Extended Sizes
    Anything outside that range
    XXS
    2X
    3X
    4X
    Tall
    Petite

    So in your structure:

    👉 2X = Extended Sizes
    Not automatically plus unless the entire brand is plus focused.


    ✅ When you would label something “Plus Size”

    Use Plus Size only when:

    • The brand is specifically a plus brand
    • The sizing starts at 1X or 2X and goes up
    • The garment is cut with plus specific proportions

    Example
    A brand that only sells 1X to 5X
    You can tag: Plus Size + Extended Sizes


    Why this distinction actually helps BODYED

    You’re organizing more by filter logic than fashion industry language.

    “Extended” = wider range availability
    “Plus” = body fit category

    That keeps things clean when you start mixing brands that carry XS through 3X because not every 2X piece is designed as traditional plus.


    If you want my honest opinion though, from a UX perspective for your site:

    I’d keep filters like this:

    Sizes Available
    Standard
    Extended

    Fit Type
    Plus Fit (optional later when inventory grows)

    That way you don’t confuse people early while BODYED is still growing.


    You said:
    Okay, so garment dyed, is that low-impact or non-toxic dyes? That’s for G-U-N-G-M-A-V-E-N. I think their whole brand does that.


    ChatGPT said:

    Short answer
    No. Garment dyed does NOT automatically mean low impact or non toxic dyes.

    This is a really important distinction for BODYED because brands use “garment dyed” as a process term, not a safety claim.

    What “garment dyed” actually means

    It just means the item is dyed after it’s sewn, instead of dyeing the fabric first.

    It can be:
    • conventional dyes
    • reactive dyes
    • low impact dyes
    • mineral dyes
    • even heavy chemical dye systems

    So the term alone tells you nothing about toxicity.


    For Jungmaven specifically

    They do talk a lot about:
    • low impact dyes
    • earth tone pigment dyes
    • garment dyeing for lived in color

    BUT you still should not assume every single garment dyed piece equals “non toxic.”

    And based on your own BODYED rules you set:

    👉 Only label Low Impact or Non Toxic Dyes when the brand explicitly states it on that product or in brand standards.

    You literally told me you want to avoid adding that line unless the brand clearly says it, so stick to that.


    What I would write instead on BODYED listings

    Safe and accurate wording:

    Garment Dyed Finish
    Uses brand’s signature pigment or low impact dye process when specified

    This keeps you transparent without over claiming.


    Mirror moment with you Bry

    I know you lean toward educating people on safer materials, but dye language is one of the fastest ways brands get pushback or legal heat. “Garment dyed” sounds earthy and natural but it’s not a certification.

    If you want, I can also give you a super quick cheat sheet:

    Garment dyed vs low impact vs AZO free vs OEKO TEX
    because once you start listing more hemp brands like Jungmaven, dyes are where things get messy fast.


    You said:
    So materials, I have a cotton and hemp blend. Should I also just do hemp and cotton separately, so if someone’s looking up cotton? Or should I just keep cotton and hemp blend and just leave that? Because it’s like cotton hemp leggings.


    ChatGPT said:

    Yes, you should absolutely let it show up under cotton and hemp too but not by changing the material name.

    Think of it like this for BODYED:

    ✅ Material Label (what the fabric actually is)

    Keep the real material as:

    Cotton Hemp Blend

    Do not split the material line into separate materials because that creates confusion and breaks your transparency system.


    ✅ Material Filters (how people find it)

    Tag it with:

    • Cotton
    • Hemp
    • Natural Fiber Blend or Natural Fiber plus Stretch if applicable

    So when someone filters “cotton” on BODYED, the leggings still appear even though they are technically a blend.


    Why this matters for your site specifically

    Your shoppers are going to search like:

    “I want cotton leggings”
    “I want hemp clothing”

    If you only label it as “cotton hemp blend,” you risk hiding products from filters, which hurts discovery and affiliate clicks.

    Big natural fiber sites do this exact thing behind the scenes. One accurate material name, multiple searchable fibers.


    Clean structure example for your listing

    Material
    Cotton Hemp Blend

    Material Tags / Filters
    Cotton
    Hemp
    Natural Fiber Blend


    And honestly Bry, this aligns perfectly with the system you’ve been building where you allow small stretch percentages but keep material honesty. You’re not diluting the brand by tagging both fibers, you’re just improving usability.

    If you want, I can also tell you the one tagging mistake I see natural fiber sites make with blends that completely ruins filtering later once inventory grows.


    You said:
    So my tags, I do like the percentage of, I do like 29% hemp, so if someone looked up hemp, that’ll still trigger that tag.


    ChatGPT said:

    Yes, that’s actually a really solid system and it fits perfectly with how you’re structuring BODYED.

    If your tag says something like:

    29% Hemp

    then technically:

    👉 Anything searching or filtering “hemp” can still trigger that item
    as long as your filter reads the word hemp inside the tag.

    So you’re not wrong at all doing it that way.


    The only thing I’d tighten up (this is the honest mirror moment)

    Right now you’re mixing two purposes into one tag:

    • Fiber searchability
    • Percentage transparency

    That works early on, but as BODYED grows it can get messy because:

    Someone might filter “hemp”
    but your system is actually filtering “29% hemp,” “55% hemp,” “100% hemp,” etc.

    Over time that creates filter chaos unless you separate them slightly.


    What I’d recommend long term (super clean structure)

    Keep BOTH:

    1. Fiber Tag
    Hemp
    Cotton

    This is the main discovery tag.

    2. Composition Tag
    29% Hemp
    71% Cotton

    This is your transparency layer.

    So your leggings would have:

    Fiber Tags
    Hemp
    Cotton

    Composition Tags
    29% Hemp
    71% Cotton


    Why this matters specifically for BODYED

    Your audience is extremely material aware. Some people care about:

    “I want anything with hemp in it”
    Others care about:

    “I want high hemp percentage only”

    Separating fiber from percentage lets you scale without rebuilding filters later.

    And honestly, the way you’re thinking about percentages already puts you ahead of most natural fiber marketplaces. You’re basically building a material database, not just a clothing shop.


    You said:
    How to change this wording products on sale to someone else using word press


    ChatGPT said:

    That text is coming from your WooCommerce theme template, not the product itself. You can change it pretty easily without breaking anything.

    Here are the safest ways depending on how you want to do it:


    ✅ EASIEST METHOD (no code)

    If you just want to rename “Products on sale” globally:

    Step 1

    Go to:
    WordPress Dashboard → Appearance → Customize

    Step 2

    Look for:
    WooCommerce → Product Catalog
    or sometimes Theme Options → Shop

    Some themes let you rename section headings right there.

    If you don’t see it, use the next method because most themes don’t expose this label.


    ✅ BEST METHOD for BODYED (what I recommend)

    Use a string editor plugin so updates never overwrite your change.

    Install plugin:

    Loco Translate

    Then:

    1. Go to Loco Translate → Plugins → WooCommerce

    2. Choose English (United States)

    3. Search for:

    Products on sale
    1. Change it to whatever you want, like:

    • Featured Picks
    • Editor Favorites
    • BODYED Finds
    • Natural Fiber Picks
    • Currently Trending

    1. Save

    Done. No coding, and it stays permanent.


    ⚠️ Do NOT edit theme files directly

    I know it’s tempting, but when your theme updates it will reset and you’ll be annoyed later.


    Real talk though Bry

    That label “Products on sale” doesn’t really match BODYED’s energy anyway. Your brand feels curated, not discount rack.

    Something stronger that aligns with your positioning could be:

    • Curated Finds
    • BODYED Approved
    • Natural Fiber Picks
    • Conscious Closet

    If you want, send me a screenshot of where that section sits on your homepage and I’ll suggest wording that fits your aesthetic and conversion strategy because wording like this actually changes how premium the site feels.


    You said:


    ChatGPT said:

    Perfect, I can see you’re inside WooCommerce with the Avada theme, so I’ll give you the exact BODYED safe way to change that wording without breaking anything.

    Right now that “Products on sale” text is NOT coming from this WooCommerce menu.
    It’s coming from either:

    • Avada theme element
    • WooCommerce translation string

    Most likely translation.

    Here is the fastest way for you.


    ⭐️ DO THIS (2 minute fix)

    Step 1

    Go to:

    Plugins → Add New

    Search:

    Loco Translate

    Install and Activate.


    Step 2

    Go to:

    Loco Translate → Plugins → WooCommerce

    Choose:

    English (United States)


    Step 3

    Use the search bar and type:

    Products on sale

    You will see the exact string.

    Change it to whatever you want, for example:

    BODYED Picks
    Curated Finds
    Natural Fiber Picks
    Featured Favorites

    Then click Save.

    Refresh your site. Done.


    Why this is the BEST option for you

    You are using Avada + WooCommerce + affiliate setup.

    If you edit Avada layouts or theme files, it WILL reset during updates and you’ll be pissed later when something breaks.

    Loco Translate keeps it permanent and safe.


    Honest mirror moment (because I know your brand direction)

    I would NOT rename it to something like “Sale” or “Deals.”

    BODYED feels premium and curated, not discount based.

    The wording that fits your positioning best would be something like:

    Curated Natural Picks
    BODYED Approved
    Editor’s Selection
    Conscious Closet Picks


    If you want, send me ONE more screenshot of where that section sits on your homepage layout (Avada Live Builder view), because Avada sometimes pulls that title from a different widget and I can tell you the exact place to change it without even using a plugin if it’s a layout block.


    You said:
    I can’t find it. Ugh, I cannot find it.


    ChatGPT said:

    Okay breathe 😅 I know exactly why you can’t find it.

    You’re using Avada, and that “Products on sale” text is almost always coming from an Avada element, NOT WooCommerce settings or normal page text. That’s why you’re clicking everywhere and it’s invisible.

    Let’s do this step by step based on your screenshot.


    🔥 FIRST try this (90 percent chance this is where it is)

    At the very top black bar I can see:

    👉 Edit Home Page

    Click that.

    That opens Avada Live Builder, which is where that section actually lives.


    Then look for this block

    Inside the page builder scroll until you see:

    Products Carousel
    Woo Products
    Products Grid
    Sale Products

    Click the little pencil icon on that block.

    Inside the settings you will see a field like:

    Heading Title
    Element Title
    Title

    That’s where “Products on sale” is coming from.

    Change it there and save.


    View product
  • Pure Inspiration Daily Conditioner

    $30.00

    Brand: Innersense Organic Beauty

    BODYED Approved • Ingredient Conscious Formula
    Selected for its silicone free conditioning system, lightweight botanical emollients, and transparent ingredient disclosure. Designed as a daily conditioner that supports fine to medium hair through balanced hydration and detangling without heavy coating agents. This is a performance focused conditioner built around ingredient awareness rather than a minimal or ultra simplified formulation.

    Product: Pure Inspiration Daily Conditioner

  • I Create Finish Non-Aerosol Hairspray

    $28.00

    Brand: Innersense Organic Beauty

    BODYED Approved • Ingredient Conscious Formula
    Selected for its non aerosol styling structure, botanical resin system, and transparent ingredient disclosure. Designed as a lightweight finishing spray that provides hold while maintaining a more ingredient conscious formulation compared to conventional aerosol hairsprays. This is a functional styling product rather than a fully non toxic or alcohol free formula.

    Product: I Create Finish Non Aerosol Hairspray