Because of my ignorance :mrgreen:
I could have easily put in 5% of the oils but I did not know . The recipe below was the soap I made not shampoo . the shampoo has almost 0 cleansing power it is more a conditioning bar this recipe below was for soap. I actually have been researching since dec. I became a member on this forum in Jan. I did not make a batch for 4 months ... I am not saying I dont have a lot to learn ( thats why I am here ) but learn best by experience .. I had small amounts of safflower 2 oz and about the same palm which were given to me I did not realise the would not be of benefit. no I am not taking this as discouragement I appreciate everyone’s input ... I actually have a couple of nice batches of soap ... I printed of my next reipe (I named it Susies soap) using percentages as you suggested for a 5 lb batch ( we cook 6 cups of rice for lunch ) which I would consider a small batch. 1/2 the people I live with would get a bar
[/QUOTE]Please tell me why you used so many oils. 7 is too many for a beginner (heck, I max out at 5 oils, and I try to stick to 4!). Not only that, but 5 of your 7 oils are less than 5% each of the total recipe. A good rule of thumb is that an oil needs to make up 5% of the total recipe for you to be able to notice its qualities in the final soap. That olive, safflower, palm, castor, and shea butter? You're not going to get anything out of them. You have coconut taking up 25% of your recipe, and that's too high for a shampoo bar (what you claim you want to make). It's on the high end for a general body bar, even. It will strip everything from hair and turn it to straw.
Please don't take this as discouragement. We really want to help you make the best soap possible. For that to happen, you really do need to stop, listen, and learn.[/QUOTE]
I could have easily put in 5% of the oils but I did not know . The recipe below was the soap I made not shampoo . the shampoo has almost 0 cleansing power it is more a conditioning bar this recipe below was for soap. I actually have been researching since dec. I became a member on this forum in Jan. I did not make a batch for 4 months ... I am not saying I dont have a lot to learn ( thats why I am here ) but learn best by experience .. I had small amounts of safflower 2 oz and about the same palm which were given to me I did not realise the would not be of benefit. no I am not taking this as discouragement I appreciate everyone’s input ... I actually have a couple of nice batches of soap ... I printed of my next reipe (I named it Susies soap) using percentages as you suggested for a 5 lb batch ( we cook 6 cups of rice for lunch ) which I would consider a small batch. 1/2 the people I live with would get a bar
[/QUOTE]Please tell me why you used so many oils. 7 is too many for a beginner (heck, I max out at 5 oils, and I try to stick to 4!). Not only that, but 5 of your 7 oils are less than 5% each of the total recipe. A good rule of thumb is that an oil needs to make up 5% of the total recipe for you to be able to notice its qualities in the final soap. That olive, safflower, palm, castor, and shea butter? You're not going to get anything out of them. You have coconut taking up 25% of your recipe, and that's too high for a shampoo bar (what you claim you want to make). It's on the high end for a general body bar, even. It will strip everything from hair and turn it to straw.
Please don't take this as discouragement. We really want to help you make the best soap possible. For that to happen, you really do need to stop, listen, and learn.[/QUOTE]
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