- Joined
- Apr 18, 2017
- Messages
- 172
- Reaction score
- 205
Hi, I recently posted a thread about soaping in a heatwave and before that "cocoa butter bloom" in soap. In both threads we got talking about soda ash and whether that was the strange thing that was happening to my soap. I said I would try making without deionised water, as that was the only think I could identify as being different to other, ash free batches. Well I did and this is the result and I am as baffled as ever.
The first pic are the worst, these are tea tree and mint, and lemongrass and poppy seed, and lavender and silk - though the latter aren't nearly as bad. The second pic are sandalwood and clay, with slight nibbles and issues on the white part of the soap but not the brown, and cinnamon, honey and oatmeal, and orange and patchouli, which are both absolutely fine. The other two soaps I made, my coffee, pumice and sea salt and rosemary and sea salt are also fine. All of these soaps have been made within days of each other, using the same technique and largely the same ingredients, apart from obviously different colourants and essential oils. They were all refrdgerated after pouring, I don't gel. I have always made my soap this way. They've been curing for about 3-4 weeks. They are made using a cellular silicone mould. I usually unmould within 24 hours, but this time waited for at least 48 hours before unmoulding. I also mixed at a slightly higher temperature than normal (about 120 degrees f instead of about 110 degrees f) in case that was a cause. They all came out of the mould looking perfect but developed the whitish look within a day or two of unmoulding. All of the problems are on the underside of the soaps not the tops. The tops of nearly all of them, even the worst ones, are fine. If it is soda ash, why is it only affecting the underside only? It isn't a surface issue, it penetrates into the soap. It literally looks like the corners and edges of the soap have been bleached. There is also some slight crumbliness in the whitish areas. For the past three batches (including this one) only the yellow, green and to a lesser extent, the pink soap and the white area of the sandalwood and clay soap have been affected, the latter not as badly this time. This is the side that is on the bottom of the cellular mould. In all cases the yellow and green soaps have been the worst. I use natural colourants - green tea wax mixed in the oils for the mint and tea tree, calendula petals mixed with the lye and left in for the lemongrass and poppy seed and madder root infused in the lye and sieved out for the lavender and silk. So all different colourants and made in different ways. All the ingredients are from reputable suppliers in the UK.
WHAT is going on!!!???!!! Help! It definitely doesn't seem to be anything to do with the water and I honestly can't think of anything else that I am doing differently from the test batches which were all fine. Except of course that now I want to sell them which I didn't when I was making the test batches. Do you think they know and don't want me too!?
The first pic are the worst, these are tea tree and mint, and lemongrass and poppy seed, and lavender and silk - though the latter aren't nearly as bad. The second pic are sandalwood and clay, with slight nibbles and issues on the white part of the soap but not the brown, and cinnamon, honey and oatmeal, and orange and patchouli, which are both absolutely fine. The other two soaps I made, my coffee, pumice and sea salt and rosemary and sea salt are also fine. All of these soaps have been made within days of each other, using the same technique and largely the same ingredients, apart from obviously different colourants and essential oils. They were all refrdgerated after pouring, I don't gel. I have always made my soap this way. They've been curing for about 3-4 weeks. They are made using a cellular silicone mould. I usually unmould within 24 hours, but this time waited for at least 48 hours before unmoulding. I also mixed at a slightly higher temperature than normal (about 120 degrees f instead of about 110 degrees f) in case that was a cause. They all came out of the mould looking perfect but developed the whitish look within a day or two of unmoulding. All of the problems are on the underside of the soaps not the tops. The tops of nearly all of them, even the worst ones, are fine. If it is soda ash, why is it only affecting the underside only? It isn't a surface issue, it penetrates into the soap. It literally looks like the corners and edges of the soap have been bleached. There is also some slight crumbliness in the whitish areas. For the past three batches (including this one) only the yellow, green and to a lesser extent, the pink soap and the white area of the sandalwood and clay soap have been affected, the latter not as badly this time. This is the side that is on the bottom of the cellular mould. In all cases the yellow and green soaps have been the worst. I use natural colourants - green tea wax mixed in the oils for the mint and tea tree, calendula petals mixed with the lye and left in for the lemongrass and poppy seed and madder root infused in the lye and sieved out for the lavender and silk. So all different colourants and made in different ways. All the ingredients are from reputable suppliers in the UK.
WHAT is going on!!!???!!! Help! It definitely doesn't seem to be anything to do with the water and I honestly can't think of anything else that I am doing differently from the test batches which were all fine. Except of course that now I want to sell them which I didn't when I was making the test batches. Do you think they know and don't want me too!?