Hello all, I'm new to the forum. I started making soap about 3 weeks ago and done a few batches of hard soap. I'm impatient and didn't exactly wait long enough for curing before trying some of my creations, but aside from the bars not being as hard as they could be I've been pretty happy with what I've made so far.
So I'm posting here because I'm sort of fascinated by the idea of a cream soap. I think this may be because I used some Taylor of Old Bond Street shaving soap a while back, which was basically what I would understand to be a cream soap, and it was excellent. I'd like to make something similar, or just have something that would make a nice hand soap as well.
So I saw the thread "Cream Soap Calculator" a little further down and there was some good discussion on cream soap and it answered some of my questions. But there are still some things that I don't get. So here we go:
Glycerin: Pretty much every cream soap recipe I've come across uses a lot of it. Why exactly is it so necessary? I've read that stearic acid has skin drying properties so I sort of assume that the purpose of the glycerin, at least in part, is to counteract that. If you (somehow) could make a cream soap without stearic acid, would the glycerin still be necessary?
Stearic acid: I gathered from the other thread that you want cream soap to be high in the stearic/palmitic acids. It seemed like the reason for this is that it will hold the soap together better as it will want to separate. So using the stearic acid seems to make sense. It just seems so...synthetic...to use pure stearic acid. "All natural" isn't actually the highest thing on my priority list, but I do sort of like the idea that so far I've made all my soap with oils that I can find on the shelf at Walmart. Thinking out loud now, perhaps I could put a high percentage of shea butter in the recipe (don't think they have it at Walmart but I just ordered some on Amazon, close enough right?). But ultimately because I've been happy with my bar soap, I want to make a soap that's very similar, just in a soft form. According to the calculators it's higher on the oleic side which according to the other thread gives you a slimy feel and tends to separate. So after those meandering thoughts, I come to this...
Experimenting: What I'd like to do is an experiment with emulsifying wax and beeswax. Basically I want to use my normal recipe, but with KOH at a 3:1 ratio with NaOH. I would use emulsifying wax (I'm thinking about 2% of the total recipe) to hold it together and hope that it doesn't separate. Because of the slimy feel, I want to try beeswax at about 3% of the base oils to see if that counteracts the slimy some. I wanted to put this out there because, though I'm an engineer and love science experiments, I want to know if I'm totally doomed to failure before wasting my ingredients. And if I do do this, I have one further question...
Hot Vs. Cold Process: Most cream soap recipes I've come across use a hot process, which I haven't ventured into yet. I did see one that was basically a cold process but started mixing at 140+ degrees instead of the 100-110 that I've been doing on my hard soap (and this would basically be necessary to try the waxes). Is there another reason most cream soap recipes are hot process? Could a (warmer) cold process still be used?
Sorry for the meandering post, but I wanted to get my thoughts out there so my questions can be totally understood. I appreciate any help you folks can provide.
So I'm posting here because I'm sort of fascinated by the idea of a cream soap. I think this may be because I used some Taylor of Old Bond Street shaving soap a while back, which was basically what I would understand to be a cream soap, and it was excellent. I'd like to make something similar, or just have something that would make a nice hand soap as well.
So I saw the thread "Cream Soap Calculator" a little further down and there was some good discussion on cream soap and it answered some of my questions. But there are still some things that I don't get. So here we go:
Glycerin: Pretty much every cream soap recipe I've come across uses a lot of it. Why exactly is it so necessary? I've read that stearic acid has skin drying properties so I sort of assume that the purpose of the glycerin, at least in part, is to counteract that. If you (somehow) could make a cream soap without stearic acid, would the glycerin still be necessary?
Stearic acid: I gathered from the other thread that you want cream soap to be high in the stearic/palmitic acids. It seemed like the reason for this is that it will hold the soap together better as it will want to separate. So using the stearic acid seems to make sense. It just seems so...synthetic...to use pure stearic acid. "All natural" isn't actually the highest thing on my priority list, but I do sort of like the idea that so far I've made all my soap with oils that I can find on the shelf at Walmart. Thinking out loud now, perhaps I could put a high percentage of shea butter in the recipe (don't think they have it at Walmart but I just ordered some on Amazon, close enough right?). But ultimately because I've been happy with my bar soap, I want to make a soap that's very similar, just in a soft form. According to the calculators it's higher on the oleic side which according to the other thread gives you a slimy feel and tends to separate. So after those meandering thoughts, I come to this...
Experimenting: What I'd like to do is an experiment with emulsifying wax and beeswax. Basically I want to use my normal recipe, but with KOH at a 3:1 ratio with NaOH. I would use emulsifying wax (I'm thinking about 2% of the total recipe) to hold it together and hope that it doesn't separate. Because of the slimy feel, I want to try beeswax at about 3% of the base oils to see if that counteracts the slimy some. I wanted to put this out there because, though I'm an engineer and love science experiments, I want to know if I'm totally doomed to failure before wasting my ingredients. And if I do do this, I have one further question...
Hot Vs. Cold Process: Most cream soap recipes I've come across use a hot process, which I haven't ventured into yet. I did see one that was basically a cold process but started mixing at 140+ degrees instead of the 100-110 that I've been doing on my hard soap (and this would basically be necessary to try the waxes). Is there another reason most cream soap recipes are hot process? Could a (warmer) cold process still be used?
Sorry for the meandering post, but I wanted to get my thoughts out there so my questions can be totally understood. I appreciate any help you folks can provide.