• Safflower flowers will give you orange, or even yellow. I have a jar infusing on my shelf right now.
• Chlorella is something I use regularly for greens. It gives a very deep, intense green. You might be able to lighten that up using a more yellow color such as turmeric.
• Iolite clay - Holly uses it - also will give you orange.
• Mixing turmeric & a little bit of rhubarb root will also give you orange.
• Indigo or woad for various shades of blue.
• Madder root can give a nice orange. I have mixed it with rhubarb root before & gotten a very nice shade of it.
• Rhubarb root & kaolin clay - or just less rhubarb root - will give you a shade of pink.
• A little bit of indigo mixed with rhubarb root could give you a nicer purple than ratanjot or alkanet.
• Red palm oil infused with a strong turmeric infusion could give you a very nice, intense orange shade.
I'm giving you a lot of possibilities for orange LOL try mixing different natural colorants, play with them.
• I have tried indigo & chlorella to get a natural, muted teal but it didn't work as great as I had hoped.
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Recommendations for inspiration, in no specific order.
Holly's Soap Making:
https://www.youtube.com/@hollysoapmaking
Check out SNIF Natural Soap Making on YouTube. I don't see any people sharing her videos in posts, but I LOVE her channel:
https://www.youtube.com/c/SNIFNaturalSoapmaking
Also, Chas from Wild Plantanica works exclusively with natural colorants:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmQfA0cETSSUDOenQIeAnJg
And yes,
@curlycoat2 - I'm sorry I forgot your name
- also has some great info. I can't recall if she had a YouTube channel, although I know I did watch one video of her giving information as to how she infuses natural plant colorants. I seem to remember buying some natural colorant info sheets from her in the last year or so, though.
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I am beginning to experiment with mushrooms now, which is interesting. I thought this would be fun as I always have some kind of dried mushrooms in the house, for food or medicine.
I recently was experimenting with 'blooming' natural colorants overnight & then using them in soap to see if I could make them more vibrant, but without adding anything like micas, oxides or pigments. This is based on how people will drop a dilution of KOH (potassium hydroxide) I believe on wild mushrooms & check the color reaction as part of the steps used for identifying what type of mushroom it is. This then led me to thinking about how Original Peoples used so many natural substances for painting houses, masks, pieces of art, even their skin / hair / nails, mixing various substances, even ash or burned plant materials with other plant materials, clays & natural minerals to get specific colors. This stuff fascinates the #$@! out of me
So I used some of my own plant material, a smidge of citric acid or vinegar (or both even), a pinch of salt, and enough distilled water to make a thick paste. I let this sit overnight, covered so it wouldn't dry out, and used the mix in soap the next day. I compared different concentrations & mixtures as well. This gave me quite nice results, and I didn't need to adjust my lye concentration for smaller batches. If I was doing a 16 pound batch this way, I would definitely recalculate to make up for the citric acid or vinegar. And yes, I DID weigh everything which went into these concoctions & made note of them. I also tried baking soda, which was useless in this case.
A very lengthy answer to your simple post about easter egg soap
Have fun