Showing posts with label Soap from Scratch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soap from Scratch. Show all posts

Friday, May 9, 2014

Honey, Fig & Oat Goat's Milk Luxury Soap

https://www.etsy.com/listing/184492025/honey-fig-and-oat-luxury-goat-milk-soap?
 Honey, Fig & Oat Goat's Milk Soap
 
I'm excited to be featured in the A Crafter's Life blog today.
Thank you, Mary Ann of Third Ear Dear, for featuring my Etsy Shop!

Mary Ann does a wonderful job of promoting other Etsy Shops.

Mary Ann's Etsy shop
Is a fun place to shop for
Handmade items and crafting supplies

This is a wonderfully creamy and moisturizing bar.
It contains a bit of oatmeal for mild exfoliation
To keep our skin fresh and renewed.

I couldn't find a Honey-Fig scent that I loved,
So I created my own special blend.

 I like the natural look of this bar.
I also like the honeycomb textured top.
Most of all, I love making and using this soap!

The goat's milk makes this bar very creamy and luxurious.
If you haven't tried goat's milk soap from scratch,
You really should sometime.
There's nothing else like it.

I have been making more goat's milk soaps of late.
I'm falling in love with the texture and
With the way it leaves my skin feeling.
 
You can get your own bar of Honey, Fig and Oat Goat's Milk Soap
It's back in stock  now in my Etsy shop.



Thanks for reading!

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Lavender & Oatmeal Goat's Milk Soap

 Have you ever tried homemade goat's milk soap?
The kind made from scratch?

This one is infused with 
Hungarian Lavender Essential Oil from Bramble Berry

It has just a touch of ground oatmeal it 
To lend mild exfoliation to the soap


This goat's milk soap is very mild and creamy
The lavender and oatmeal contribute 
Wonderful skin nourishing properties


If you have never tried
Made from scratch goat's milk soap,
You may want to treat yourself to some soon.

is available on Etsy while it lasts.
 
Thanks for reading!




Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Peacock Swirl Soap

How to Make a Peacock Swirl
In Cold Process Soap
 
I'm so excited!
At the Handcrafted Soap and Cosmetic Guild conference,
AKA The Soap Conference,
I got to attend a session on a very cool kind of swirl.
 
It's called the peacock swirl.
 
Anne-Marie, the Soap Queen and the CEO of Bramble Berry,
 Invited me to be a guest blogger on the Soap Queen Blog.
She missed the soap conference this year.
She was awaiting the arrival of her sweet baby girl.
So I get to write about some of the sessions.
The Peacock Swirl is one of the sessions I wrote about.
I hope you'll stop by The Soap Queen blog and read about
 
Thanks for reading!

Monday, April 22, 2013

Happy Earth Day!

Happy Earth Day!
 
Here's a soap I made last year in honor of Earth Day.
It smells like my garden in the Spring.
 
Thanks for reading!
 

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Beer Soap, Part 2

If you missed the first post about beer soap,
You can find it here.
 
Now, for the reveal of the unmolded soap!
 
In this photo, you can see the beer on the bottom
And the froth on top.
I wish you could smell it.
 
Here it is from a slightly different angle.
 
 
Here it is right after I cut it.
I love how the edges are darker.
The difference between the beer and froth
Is very vague, but it's there.
My eyes keep getting drawn
To the edges.
 
Here's how it looked a day or two later.
The darker edges are less noticeable.
The contrast between the beer and froth
Is more visible.
 
And here it is a month later.
I'm happy that it still has the
Beer and froth look going.
 
Thanks for reading!
 
 
 
 
 



Sunday, April 14, 2013

Happy Birthday, James

Our son, James, is an Army Infantryman.
He is currently deployed to Afghanistan.
He turns 21 today.
Happy Birthday, James.
 
This post is in honor of his 21st birthday.
Certainly it's every son's dream
To have his mom blog in his honor on his birthday.
Especially on his 21st.
Ahem. But I digress.
 
I'm going to tell you about the beer soap I made recently.
Hey, a guy only turns 21 once.
Let's celebrate with beer soap.
 
I made some beer soap a few years ago.
At the time, I couldn’t find a beer fragrance to add.
So I didn’t add any fragrance to it.
It was great soap.
It was mild and bubbly.
 
Bramble Berry began offering beer fragrances a while back.
This time around, I got to add beer fragrance to the soap.
I decided to try one called Oatmeal Stout.
Thus the hunt began for Oatmeal Stout beer.
 
I found this.
I used this post on the Soap Queen blog as a guide.
I began by boiling the beer.
Yuck. It stunk.
Once the boiled beer was room temperature,
I added the lye to the beer.
Again, yuck.
It stunk even worse!
 
I added the beer/lye mixture to the oils.
 
 
It actually smelled okay.
In fact, it smelled good!
It became a gorgeous caramel color.
 
Here I'm adding the Oatmeal Stout Fragrance.
 
I divided the batch into two parts.
 
I added Pearly White Mica from Bramble Berry  to part of the batch.
 
The mica lightened the base a bit.
The lighter portion was designed to be
The foamy part on top.
The darker portion was to be
The beer itself.
 
Here is the beer portion in the molds.
 
And the frothy top.
 
I'll show you the cut bars in another post.
 
In the meantime,
Happy Birthday, James.
We miss you and love you.
 
Thanks for reading!
 

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Feel Good Spa Soap

Feel Good Spa Soap
 
This soap was inspired by my son's request.
He asked for a soap for a stressed out friend.
 
After doing some research,
I decided to add activated charcoal
And Mauve Clay
To a natural soap base from scratch.
 
 
The bottom layer is soap base with
An essential and fragrance oil blend.
The main components are ylang ylang and vanilla.
 
The next layer is a thin one with activated charcoal added.
Activated Charcoal provides mild exfoliation.
It also is known to have detoxification properties.
 
The top layer is colored with mauve clay.
Mauve clay is chock full of minerals.
 
I couldn't resist adding some texture to the tops.
 
Here's what the soap looked like right after it was cut.
See the faint lines around the edges on the bottom part?
 
Here's what it looked like a few days after it was cut.
The vanilla content caused significant darkening.

Here's how it looks after a few weeks.
 
You can get your very own bar here.
 
 
Thanks for reading!
 
 
 
 


 


Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Hand Milled Soap

I have wrestled with myself on exactly how much of this story to divulge.
I decided to go ahead and tell you the whole thing.
So, here we go.
 
This is my extra bubbly good for shaving soap.
It has bentonite clay for slip.
It has castor oil for extra lather.
 
This soap doesn't stay in stock for long.
There is also always a bar or two in my shower.
So I made a 10 pound batch recently.
 
I added the clay to the liquid oils.
I hadn't done it this way before.
It seemed to work well.
 
When the soap was at light trace
I added some colorant.
I used Blue Mix Labcolor from Bramble Berry.
It's been my go-to color for this soap.
I usually make three layers
In three variegated (ombre?) shades of blue.
 
Also from Bramble Berry
It's manly, but most women like it too.
 
Fast forward to the poured soap.
I guess I forgot to take pictures of several steps.
 
 There was so much soap that it filled four loaf molds
Plus a few single bar cavities.
 
As I was putting supplies away,
I noticed the jug of castor oil.
Yes, jug.
I buy it by the gallon.
Anyway, I realized that I forgot to add the castor oil.
 
As the oils and lye combine to make soap,
The process of saponification occurs.
That means the oils and lye react
To produce soap.
 

Saponification takes the mixture from this

To this.
It also continues for several hours after the soap is poured.

When I design a soap recipe,
I use this SoapMaker program.
It lets me make sure there will be some leftover oils.
I think of it as the oils eating up the lye.
I shoot for about 5-8% more oils
Than what is required to "eat up" the lye.
If you are a soapmaker, it's okay if you chuckle at my
Technical explanation of saponification.

I did some quick calculations.
Based on the oils I did remember to use,
And based on the amount of lye used,
The soap was going to come out lye-heavy.
Not by a lot, but by a little.
You could even call it a smidge.

I use this extra bubbly soap for shaving.
But even if I didn't,
I would not be satisfied with lye heavy soap.
Even slightly, barely detectable lye heavy soap.

A really great thing about making soap
Is that you can almost always save a botched batch.

The way I saved this one was by hand milling it.
Here's how I did it.

Two days after the initial pour,
I unmolded the soap.
I cut the slighly lye heavy soap into small chunks.
I put these chunks into a crock pot.
I added the castor oil that I forgot the first time around.
The crockpot was set on low.
I melted the soap down.
It took a few hours.

This is known as rebatching, or milling.

Here's the melted soap glopped into a mold.

After another couple of days,
I unmolded the hand milled soap.

Here it is!

 
I'm quite happy with the end product.
I've already used part of a bar, and am loving it.

One advantage of hand milling is that
The soap can be used right away.
Usually there is a 3-4 (or more) week waiting period.

Another advantage is that the soap has an interesting look and texture.
I also think it produces more bubbles.

Each bar is one of a kind.

I set a lot of these bars back for personal use,
But a few will go up for sale.

Thanks for reading my hand milled soap saga!