Is the 2.5" high "optimal?"
I ask because I've not really thought that the molds I have are intended to be filled as that makes a bar that's too tall, so is there a level you strive for with a bar which is intended to create a single "layer" of soap?
Hi Lee!
2.5" is a very nice height for me for when my mold is in 'log mode'. I fill it up all the way to the top, and it gives me fully cured bars that fits nicely in everyone's hand (not to big/not too small, but just right).
When it is in 'slab mode', I can choose to 1) fill it up all the way to the top in order to make a double layer, which essentially takes a 4.6 lbs. batch (based on oil amount using a 33% lye solution), giving me a total of 18 bars of soap with the dimensions of 2.5" x 3 5/16" x 1.25" thick at cutting time, or....
2) I can fill the slab up only part way for a single layer, which makes 9 bars @ 2.5" x 3 5/16" x whatever thickness that strikes my fancy. My favorite thickness is 1.25", which happens to take a 2.3 lb. batch of oils @ 33% lye solution, but sometimes I fill it up a little more to get about a 1.5" thickness, which takes a 2.8 lbs. batch of oils @ 33% lye solution. I really love having the option to vary my slab thickness this way.
My other mold of this type that I bought from Dianna's Sugar Plum Sundries has all the same dimensions as the above, but the height of it is 3.5" instead of 2.5", which comes in handy for those times I want to make a double-layer batch of 18 bars in slab mode that are thicker than 1.25"; or for when I'm making log-type soaps with those high, textured tops, which I actually don't really do all that often, but it's still nice to have that option just in case. I can do log soaps of that nature in my other mold, too, only I have to adjust the height of my cover like I explained in my earlier post. With Dianna's mold, I don't have to adjust my cover's height.
Last question (for this post): How do you split a slab into bars which are then cut into individual soaps?
Ancient Irish secret! ha ha ha.
Okay, not really- this is what I do: Once my slab of soap is removed and the liners peeled away, I set the soap on my counter flat/horizontally with the longest (10") side facing towards me. Then I take my ruler and divide my 10" slab of soap into 3rds, making my notches on both the nearest-to-me-side and the farthest-from-me-side of the slab so that I can line my long kitchen knife up in the notches to slice down evenly.
Once that is done, I'm left with 3 columns of soap. Working with one column at a time, I set the column down on my counter flat/horizontally with (again) the longest side facing towards me. Then, using my ruler, I divide it into 3rds, making notches and cutting the same as I did above. Voila- 3 perfect bars of soap. Well, almost perfect- they haven't been beveled yet.
Then I do the same to the other 2 columns, which gives me 9 bars total (which I then bevel).
When I make a double-layer slab, I do the exact same as above, which initially leaves me with 9
really thick bars of soap that I further cut in half horizontally to give me a total of 18 bars.
HTH!
IrishLass