Soapmaker145
Well-Known Member
I was testing the base oil mix I planned to use for the swap soap when disaster struck. My plan calls for a geometric design that is poured, sectioned and then assembled into the final soap. I used a mix of 2 FOs I had and added it to the batter barely at emulsion. I needed to add micas and I knew that they may accelerate. The batter turned into thick mashed potatoes within 2 seconds of adding the FOs. I quickly tried to mix the micas and things went from bad to worse. I ended up with hard lumpy mess to a pliable dough depending on the mica. I put everything in the molds and left them alone overnight. In the morning, I tried to recover some pieces to check if it can be assembled. I had a lot of confetti from all the planing I had to do. I squished everything in the molds including the confetti any way I could, placed them in the oven without insulation for 3 hours at 170oF. I cut them a day later. I was really surprised that I didn't end up with swiss cheese and the soaps held up pretty well. Some of the imperfections were introduced by me during cutting. Now I want to make confetti out of different color soaps, squish together and gel to see what I end up with.
I thought I would share just in case other people needed to salvage some misbehaving batters. Maybe other people knew that you could squish confetti into a mold and end up with usable soaps but it never occurred to me. It might be a way to deal with misbehaving FOs and still end up with a reasonable design.
I thought I would share just in case other people needed to salvage some misbehaving batters. Maybe other people knew that you could squish confetti into a mold and end up with usable soaps but it never occurred to me. It might be a way to deal with misbehaving FOs and still end up with a reasonable design.