Takes a lot more fragrance than you'd think. In my (minimal) experience at least 1oz per loaf (which is about 40oz for the mold I made).
I think I answered my own question digging back on the thread.What is your weight in oil?
Thank you. This is awesome. I am a 27-year-old male who is now interested in soapmaking. What have you done.
You could have a soap that was passable in a month, but it would be better after 6 weeks or more. Soap has to cure for a while before it reaches it's potential.So... What would be a nice, easy going, good looking ( Christmas nears!) recipe for a soap that would be ready to use in around a month?
It would be a bit of a waste to use culinary olive oil for soap. I mean look at the nasty stuff (lye) you are mixing with it! Some of the best soaps made in the world are made with 100% Pomace Olive Oil and aside from the color you'd be hard pressed to tell them apart from any made with virgin. There's a higher level of unsaponifiable materials in Pomace, so this actually could add to them being milder/better on the skin.And what about those olive oil recommendations, I would like to go with extra native Virgin olive oil (if I use olive oil) , as this is not chemically treated as opposed to the one recommended at the beginning of this thread.
I'll 2nd that! Except for being 32...
You could have a soap that was passable in a month, but it would be better after 6 weeks or more. Soap has to cure for a while before it reaches it's potential.
One soap I like a lot is as follows:
33% Tallow
33% Coconut Oil
33% Palm Kernel Oil
It's a nice hard hand and bath soap that serves as a great base for additives as you see fit.
It would be a bit of a waste to use culinary olive oil for soap. I mean look at the nasty stuff (lye) you are mixing with it! Some of the best soaps made in the world are made with 100% Pomace Olive Oil and aside from the color you'd be hard pressed to tell them apart from any made with virgin. There's a higher level of unsaponifiable materials in Pomace, so this actually could add to them being milder/better on the skin.
If you are dead set on doing that, there's no harm. There's an ever so slight difference in saponification numbers (184-196 for virgin, 182-193 for pomace) so in very large batches you will want to make sure your soap calculator takes account of that. In a smaller batch it's within the margin of error.
100% Olive Oil (called a Castille formally) is a great soap for that matter. It takes a good year to come into it's own, but it's worth doing.How about removing the tallow in your recipe and replacing it with olive oil and a bit of shea butter? Do you think this might work?
That's not a bad idea. There's a book that helps a person approach soapmaking from a more structured standpoint:Hahaha, maybe I should go the same route I went when I started brewing... Instead of smash beers it is sos , single oil soaps to get to know the base ingredients![]()
So... What would be a nice, easy going, good looking ( Christmas nears!) recipe for a soap that would be ready to use in around a month?
Impossible task?
And what about those olive oil recommendations, I would like to go with extra native Virgin olive oil (if I use olive oil) , as this is not chemically treated as opposed to the one recommended at the beginning of this thread.
Sry, if this has been asked before... But... You know... 50 pages....
Thanks!
By using animal fats you are reducing the waste that normally would head off to a landfill.
If you're dead set on vegan use a mix of coconut, olive, and castor.
Safflower and rapeseed are good to soap with however you need to use less than 20% because they tend to cause DOS.
I was wondering too. Guessing not "Denial of Soap."
Not sure if this is the right thread, but I'm taking a chance. I have about 6 bricks of bees wax that I'm not sure how to use. I remember someone made chapstick on here which I will try. I also saw someone at a craft fair yesterday selling "lotion bars" that looked like soap but were solid bars of hand lotion. She said they use bees wax, so I might dig up a recipe?
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Would you mind describing your process for liquid soap, maybe on an example recipe that you like as a shower gel and shampoo? I am going to order my stuff next week and I want to do some hard and some liquid soap. I will start with the one recipe suggested here a few posts above this one and I will (for now) stick to plant based oils.I started this thread so long ago, so I wanted to post a little update. Back then, I only did cold process but for the last few years I've done mainly hot process, except for salt bars.
We use only my homemade soap in bathing, washing dishes, shampoo, etc. I like to use liquid soap in soap dispensers in the bathroom and kitchen and that's a bit of a different process. Today I made some more liquid soap, and thought I would post a picture:
View attachment 420109
Liquid soap is a hot process, and the paste is made and then diluted with distilled water. It's a bit different because the ingredients differ in how they act, and you can use far more castor oil (for example) but less saturated oils. It also uses potassium hydroxide (caustic potash) instead of sodium hydroxide. Homemade liquid soap tends to be very thin, almost like water, so my "secret" is to use a mix of both types of lye, to get a liquid soap with some body.
The easiest way to make liquid soap is to make a liquid glycerin soap. Once you master that, making another liquid soap is easy. You need to use KOH instead of NaOH, a different lye formula. I'd probably start with this:
Once you get it down, the next step is to mix KOH and NaOH, to make hybrid soaps like cream soap and gels and bodywash.
Thanks!
Yes, exactly those mixed soaps is what i'm after. At what ratios are you mixng KOH and NaOH to get a nice shower gel-ish consistency?