With the coconut oil added, is it possible to wait it out, or no?"...I did include it in the soap, though. ..."
That's good to know.
I hope you are able to appreciate now why the advice you were getting at first wasn't quite on target.
With the coconut oil added, is it possible to wait it out, or no?"...I did include it in the soap, though. ..."
That's good to know.
I hope you are able to appreciate now why the advice you were getting at first wasn't quite on target.
I understand, we only have so much time and energy each day. If someone could explain to me how to figure it out myself, I would really appreciate it.@camproses -- I haven't taken the time to redo the calculations. I'm feeling disheartened to learn I spent a fair bit of time to give bad advice based on wrong info. That said, there are no hard feelings on my end -- just lost my mojo. I hope others can advise.
the reduced water and addition of ice is new informationThank you! I actually only used around 14-16 oz ice/water instead of the 22 oz on the recipe. Would you still wait it out or rebatch? I cut the soap today and despite soaping at around 98 degrees F, it is covered in glycerine rivers. I love the design though and I am kicking myself for screwing it up lol.
Does it zap?
And what are the speckles?
the reduced water and addition of ice is new information
the lye concentration is now about 35%
soap can always be rebatched later
there is no harm in curing at least some of these for a long time to see if the lye heaviness cures out
keep some testers if you do decide to rebatch
rebatch like colours (green with green, pink with pink) to avoid a muddy look
Your lye concentration does not matter as much, provided you use the appropriate amount of lye.Thank you for responding! I have not tested it because it has only been a few days. The speckles are ground kelp. The green color is from French green clay and spirulina, and the pink color is from rose clay. I scented it with 3.5 oz tea tree oil.
I think I will keep at least some of them as an experiment, if nothing else. I need to do some reading to better understand what lye concentrations will produce a useable bar of soap. Right now I have no idea what a 35% concentration will mean for the soap. I have always just put numbers into websites like soapcalc or Brambleberry's recipe calcularor without having a working knowledge of those numbers. Again, I really appreciate your response. Thank you .
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