Just leaving it open will get rid of most of the chlorine.
I am not confident. I have read it would need many days. And even if so, certainly only a certain amount. What about the heavier compounds?
It is not clear what you mean by "natural water" - every "natural water" contains chlorine as chlorides, plus many other cations an anions. Sea water - by all means "natural" - contains 3.5% of the them.
I am allergic against chlorine. I have also tried ascorbic acid. But it has also adverse effects in my experience. Maybe because of acid, HCl, I don't know.
Of course, chlorine in form of NaCl is no problem.
The simple answer is: harmless water to skin and hair. Like natural water.
Mix chlorinated tap water with ascorbin acid, so chlorine will change into NaOH.
No, chlorine won't change into NaOH. Chlorine (Cl2) can get reduced to chlorides (Cl-), not change into another compound that doesn't contain chlorine atoms at all.
That's true. Sorry, I meant HCl.
I know about a similar substance to ascorbic acid, where some -H group is replaced by -Na. It would produce NaCl instead of HCl. But I have no experience with it.