Right! The trimmings can be used in confetti soap or to make embeds, etc.. As time goes on, I have accumulated more soap bits than I can ever use and most of it is not going to make great confetti soap. Thatās when I start thinking about waste.Nougat-intensive methods not being an option for me...
Or it creates a new stash...
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So! Back to the question! How many of you plane and bevel?
This! Clean the World used to accept trimmings and end pieces from the handmade community, so I had a place to donate them. When that stopped, I felt that I should save the trimmings and ended up with a lot of scraps that, in reality, I would never use. I don't sell and confetti soaps aren't my favorite to use. I came to the conclusion that, for me, it's okay to have a bit of waste. This is my hobby. Compare it to someone whose hobby is golf - how many golf balls do they lose in a season? (sometimes a lot LOL) When I did stained glass work, how many little, unusable scraps had to be discarded - a fair amount. When I was able to knit, how many ends of a skein did I have sitting around? Let's just say when I had to stop and later clear out some space in the drawer there was more than I would have thought. So all of this is to say, I'm now at peace with tossing a few grams of soap from beveling.Right! The trimmings can be used in confetti soap or to make embeds, etc.. As time goes on, I have accumulated more soap bits than I can ever use and most of it is not going to make great confetti soap. Thatās when I start thinking about waste.
I have made a couple of batches of salted out soap this summer - and turned it into laundry soap (half soap half baking soda) it works really well actually.This! Clean the World used to accept trimmings and end pieces from the handmade community, so I had a place to donate them. When that stopped, I felt that I should save the trimmings and ended up with a lot of scraps that, in reality, I would never use. I don't sell and confetti soaps aren't my favorite to use. I came to the conclusion that, for me, it's okay to have a bit of waste. This is my hobby. Compare it to someone whose hobby is golf - how many golf balls do they lose in a season? (sometimes a lot LOL) When I did stained glass work, how many little, unusable scraps had to be discarded - a fair amount. When I was able to knit, how many ends of a skein did I have sitting around? Let's just say when I had to stop and later clear out some space in the drawer there was more than I would have thought. So all of this is to say, I'm now at peace with tossing a few grams of soap from beveling.
I'd be really curious to know the process as I'd love to have a good outlet for my scraps. Have you posted about this elsewhere on SMF?I have made a couple of batches of salted out soap this summer - and turned it into laundry soap (half soap half baking soda) it works really well actually.View attachment 60621
How many of you plane and bevel your bars?
Thats a great idea'I sell to a local gift shop. People buy my soap as souvenirs or gifts, so I want my bars to look pretty and feel good. That means making interesting swirls (although I'm by no means an expert at this!), planing to remove cut marks, and beveling the corners.
Right after I get done planing and beveling, I "smoosh" all of the scraps from each batch into a soap bar. To make the scraps stick together better, I'll dampen them with alcohol or distilled water. After lightly tossing the scraps to mix the alcohol or water evenly throughout, I press and work the scraps into a compact "hamburger bun" shape. This bar of scraps gets cured along with the nice ones. My "smoosh" bar is often the only bar that gets used by the household -- the rest get sold.
I credit this idea to Irish Lass. It has solved my problem of how to store and what to do with soap scraps -- I never have any scraps to worry about.
Ah, good idea adding the water - I do this too sometimes by putting the scraps into a bar press, but it can be a crap shoot as to whether it ends up crumbly. I should try dampening it next time!Right after I get done planing and beveling, I "smoosh" all of the scraps from each batch into a soap bar. To make the scraps stick together better, I'll dampen them with alcohol or distilled water. After lightly tossing the scraps to mix the alcohol or water evenly throughout, I press and work the scraps into a compact "hamburger bun" shape. This bar of scraps gets cured along with the nice ones. My "smoosh" bar is often the only bar that gets used by the household -- the rest get sold.
I like to bevel but vegetable peeler wasnāt working for me, butter knife just ok. Read this post today & just happened to have ready to bevel! Rummaged thru back of tool drawer & whalah! Tried it, loved it. Hardly any waste. Will use this way from here on out.Following on what @dibbles mentioned, one of my dadās first comments about my soap was about the sharp edges. I donāt sell, but do gift, and mostly bevel or at least smooth the edges. The knife on the edge trick is fast and easy. After reading this post shared by @SoapWitch , I use a lemon zester when I want more of a bevel.
Planing can fix or improve a lot of cosmetic issues in soap, but takes time and creates waste.
Love those bars! But donāt you still have the bottom of the soap to plane and bevel?If there were an elegant/reliable way to bevel the 2 (in words: two) edges of column mould bars, I'd probably make many more of these.
A neat (but nougat-intensive) way to avoid beveling in the first place is usage of individual bar moulds with rounded edges.
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