Showing posts with label Soap Mold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soap Mold. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Old Fashioned Lavender Soap Recipe

Does soap ever behave like you expect it to behave?
I made lavender soap this morning with lard, olive oil, coconut oil, and castor oil. I used a little beet root powder and activated charcoal, hoping for a color in the lavender family. What I got was dark green and medium green. Hopefully it will morph into a gray color, at least. Newly poured, it looks like this. I will see what it looks like tomorrow after it gels.


Do not forget to always use protective gear when working with lye - safety goggles, plastic gloves, and long sleeves. Keep children and pets away from the mixture and never leave your lye unattended. I mix mine in a plastic pitcher in the sink (in case of volcanic reactions). I also use the sink because I'm messy and usually drip, dribble, or spill my oil mixture sometime during the process.


This is a cold process soap and the recipe is as follows:
  • Lard - 16 ounces
  • Coconut Oil, 76 degrees - 12 ounces
  • Olive Oil - 12 ounces
  • Castor Oil - 4 ounces
  • Lye (NaOH) - 6.27 ounces
  • Water (distilled) - 16.72 ounces
Mix the lye slowly to the water (mine is part cold distilled water and part crushed ice) in a plastic pitcher until dissolved.
Melt the lard and coconut oil in another pitcher or bucket. Slowly add the lye water and mix with a stick blender in short bursts until it reaches trace (the consistency of thin pudding).
  • I did a very slight water discount so I only used 15.72 ounces of water. 
  • I added about 1/8 cup of finely chopped lavender buds and 2 TBS Hungarian Lavender essential oil to the mixture at trace.  I divided the oil into 2/3 and 1/3. I added 2 TBS Beet Root powder and 1/2 tsp activated charcoal to the 1/3 oil mixture. I alternated the two colored mixtures and poured into the mold. Then I swirled with a wooden stick. As I said, I was expecting gray and got green so now I wait and hope the color changes. 
  • I sprinkled some lavender buds on top of the soap as a subtle accent.
  • This recipe fills a 44 ounce mold.
I think that alkanet root powder would make a better color but mine hasn't been delivered yet. So my suggestion is to use alkanet instead of beet root powder for color. I'm sure you could use a pretty mica, but then the soap isn't truly "natural" because the mica is man-made.



Update: This is what the soap looks like two days later. The dark green has morphed into gray (woohoo!) and the light green is more of a beige. Not quite the color I wanted but it will work.


Monday, April 27, 2015

A Very Cheap Soap Mold from Hobby Lobby

Pics of my latest soap. Island Escape (because I used Island Escape fragrance oil). It isn't coming out the color I had hoped for. Can't see any pink or orange/yellow, just the usual color of yellow-green. The pic of the single cut bar of soap is Cucumber Spearmint and has real cucumber in it, but it looks a lot like my Island Escape, with has no cucumber in it. Back to the drawing board of natural soap colors.

FYI, this "Soap Mold" was an unfinished rectangular box from Hobby Lobby. It's around 13" long and retail price is $6.99 and with the 40% off coupon it was $4.20. I removed the top and hardware and it's almost the same size as one of the $40 wooden soap loaf molds. I line it with freezer paper, put a one inch ribbon between the freezer paper and the wooden box, and use it to pull the soap up and out. Easy Peasy.  This mold holds 44 oz.
Island Escape
Island Escape
Cucumber Spearmint

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I love my 2 grandsons and reading. I like traveling but the only place I go any more is Colorado. Maybe after I move to Colorado I'll travel to other places.