I am going to play devil's advocate here and say that if you are looking to add all these type of "exotic" additives, wouldn't it just be easier to buy a specific soap targeted to your needs.
The thing is: there's no current soap on the market made for this problem. Hence, my reluctance to discuss exactly what I'm trying to accomplish with my formula. (I don't know if it's impossible to solve or if it's just something that's so niche - it isn't worth the investment by large corporations.) I promise I'll reveal more once I've gotten closer to cracking this nut.
The beauty of an artisan soap recipe is in it's simplicity - lye solution plus oils equals soap.
IMHO, the beauty of artisan soaps is the customizability... especially the formulas.
There are handmade soaps out there for eczema, acne, ashen skin and more... made for campers, gardners, even blacksmiths... using unique ingredients like hemp oil, goat's milk, sulphur, colloidal oatmeal, borax... (things the soaping companies aren't doing).
I dig all the lines, layers, swirls, woodgrain technique, etc. that YouTube soapmakers are doing -- but as a guy, what I care most about are the "practical" applications:
can it get all the funk of sweat, dirt and humidity off my skin?
Will it remove the smell of fish guts, squid, mussels or clams from my hands?
Does it leave me feeling clean & refreshed?
Without really realizing it, I've been collecting a "wish list" of things I wanted my soaps to do. for example: H2O used to make an amazing "cooling" shower soap that they discontinued. I've kept the last bottle of shower gel in a drawer for 20 years. (Turns out they used pennyroyal in it!) Now, I can try to recreate this recipe (without harmful EOs). A great summertime soap...
Now, armed with the knowledge shared here and on YouTube and blogs, I can take a shot and creating soaps that tackle the issues that I believe are problematic. (again, who knows if they really are?)
Yes, but I'm not sure that is germane to this discussion.
Ahh, but it is.
There's sodium bentonite, calcium bentonite, magnesium bentonite and potassium bentonite... only one works best at absorbing oils. Did you know that most soap suppliers don't even know the difference?
Anyway - I digress...
I'm planning on creating a master batch of soap batter soon and adding specific additives at trace into each individual bar... something like what Soap & Clay does here:
(nice video BTW)
or an updated version of this:
https://www.modernsoapmaking.com/blog/lather-lovers-additive-testing
I'd be happy to post results to those interested (or create a new thread to talk more about this experiment).
As always --
many thanks to all who generously share their experience and knowledge on these forums.
I would not be making such giant strides in my soaping journey without you guys.