One of my biggest frustrations in my 11 months of soap making has been accelerating fragrance oils. I finally got brave – and organized – enough to use that power to my advantage.
I made a 3-layered soap in a small loaf mold (600g of oil).
Here's what I did: I had all my mica and fragrance oil measured out in separate cups (I use espresso cups), 3 cups of mica + 3 cups of FO, one for each layer.
At emulsion, I divided the batter evenly into 3 measuring cups. For each one, I added the mica, mixed and then added the FO. I had about 1 second to mix in the FO and pour into the mold. It hardened almost immediately. Then I went back to do the next one. The layers came out very straight, and it was easy to pour the next layer because the soap was hard already.
Here's the result:
The fragrance is Fresh Rain, hence the shades of blue.
I'm really happy and excited about how it came out!
ETA: It's the same soap. The colors just look different because of the different camera angles. The in-real-life colors are closest to the cut soap.
I made a 3-layered soap in a small loaf mold (600g of oil).
Here's what I did: I had all my mica and fragrance oil measured out in separate cups (I use espresso cups), 3 cups of mica + 3 cups of FO, one for each layer.
At emulsion, I divided the batter evenly into 3 measuring cups. For each one, I added the mica, mixed and then added the FO. I had about 1 second to mix in the FO and pour into the mold. It hardened almost immediately. Then I went back to do the next one. The layers came out very straight, and it was easy to pour the next layer because the soap was hard already.
Here's the result:
The fragrance is Fresh Rain, hence the shades of blue.
I'm really happy and excited about how it came out!
ETA: It's the same soap. The colors just look different because of the different camera angles. The in-real-life colors are closest to the cut soap.