Dezeen has teamed up with New York brand Good Thing for this competition, offering the chance to win minimal body-wash bars by British designer Jasper Morrison.
Five readers will each receive one Soap, moulded as four joined bars that can then be snapped apart. These can either be placed at different wash stations, or saved for later in a clear and resealable blister package provided.
Produced by Brooklyn-based Good Thing, Morrison's design is intended to strip the everyday item back to its bare essentials.
The rectangular washing bars are translucent, with recessed lettering that spells the appropriately simple name providing the only decoration. This text intentionally wears away with use.
The bars are also fragrance free, "hypoallergenic and very gentle on the skin".
"By reducing soap to the fewest possible ingredients and eliminating potentially harmful additives, we've created a gentle and effective tool for the kitchen, powder room and shower," said Good Thing.
Soap follows Morrison's famed minimal aesthetic, which can be seen in his previous products from a shelf for publisher Penguin to furniture, customisable kitchens and clothing.
The British designer was an "obvious choice" for Good Thing, which intends to re-imagine mundane homeware items like dustpans, bookends and umbrella stands.
"The idea to create a bar of soap stemmed from our belief that this elemental and historically rich tool should be elementary in its nature — it should do what it's supposed to do, do it well, and do it without anything unnecessary," said Good Thing founder Jamie Wolfond, who contacted Morrison after noticing he was liking images on the brand's Instagram account.
First unveiled by earlier this year, Soap is now available for purchase from Good Thing's website for $29 (£20).