I’m looking for advice. I have tried many recipes in my time of making soap and pretty much all of them last brilliantly in the shower with both my husband and I using them daily. They go right down to the last slither but the same bars used on my sink by 5 people daily are getting to about 1/3 down and suddenly become soft, so much so that I can press my finger into the centre of squish and it sinks quite deeply. My youngest child really delights in doing this which I’ve tried to stop happening but the temptation is strong for him!!!
Overnight they are drying out well and the squish does go but at weekends they’ve got a good layer of squish all round as they get so much usage.
This particular batch (500g) was cured for 8 weeks, I used 1.4:1 water:lye. Put through gel phase using heating mat. Added 2.5g salt, 5g sugar, 5g citric acid, 5g kaolin clay, 15g essential oil.
And has:
45% olive oil (EVOO)
10 % cocoa
15 % Mango
20 % coconut
5% avocado oil
5 % Castor
I understand I could help with the issue by adding lard or tallow and I’ve made soaps using these and this does remove the problem as they last amazingly on the sink but I prefer the feel of soaps made with plant based ingredients, tallow made my skin feel dry?? Also, most of my friends are adverse to tallow and lard so my immediate audience wants vegan.
But can anyone see any blazingly obvious thing I’m doing wrong? I see so many soap sellers using recipes with less hardness/longevity than mine, in fact I know of one soap maker (very successful) using a recipe that I’ve tried and the same thing happens so I am actually driving myself mad wondering why I can’t get my soaps to where they should be. Or am I expecting too much? Is this what plant-based soaps are like full stop?
I have tried sodium lactate and switched back to salt as didn’t notice a massive difference.
I have taken my soaps down to 1.2:1 which reduced cure time but eventually the same thing happened with the soap on the sink.
I have switched between pomace and EVOO and other than time to trace I haven’t noticed a huge difference in the end product either.
I honestly don’t know what else I can try. Should I go down the stearic acid route???
I love making soap so much but honestly this issue is driving me bonkers. Sorry for the long and wordy post but I can only vent so much to my husband before I lose his attention for the millionth time!
Thanks in advance!
I should also add that I have an abundance of different soap dishes that I’ve also tried and they are all free draining and the soap is well elevated…..
Overnight they are drying out well and the squish does go but at weekends they’ve got a good layer of squish all round as they get so much usage.
This particular batch (500g) was cured for 8 weeks, I used 1.4:1 water:lye. Put through gel phase using heating mat. Added 2.5g salt, 5g sugar, 5g citric acid, 5g kaolin clay, 15g essential oil.
And has:
45% olive oil (EVOO)
10 % cocoa
15 % Mango
20 % coconut
5% avocado oil
5 % Castor
I understand I could help with the issue by adding lard or tallow and I’ve made soaps using these and this does remove the problem as they last amazingly on the sink but I prefer the feel of soaps made with plant based ingredients, tallow made my skin feel dry?? Also, most of my friends are adverse to tallow and lard so my immediate audience wants vegan.
But can anyone see any blazingly obvious thing I’m doing wrong? I see so many soap sellers using recipes with less hardness/longevity than mine, in fact I know of one soap maker (very successful) using a recipe that I’ve tried and the same thing happens so I am actually driving myself mad wondering why I can’t get my soaps to where they should be. Or am I expecting too much? Is this what plant-based soaps are like full stop?
I have tried sodium lactate and switched back to salt as didn’t notice a massive difference.
I have taken my soaps down to 1.2:1 which reduced cure time but eventually the same thing happened with the soap on the sink.
I have switched between pomace and EVOO and other than time to trace I haven’t noticed a huge difference in the end product either.
I honestly don’t know what else I can try. Should I go down the stearic acid route???
I love making soap so much but honestly this issue is driving me bonkers. Sorry for the long and wordy post but I can only vent so much to my husband before I lose his attention for the millionth time!
Thanks in advance!
I should also add that I have an abundance of different soap dishes that I’ve also tried and they are all free draining and the soap is well elevated…..