UnScented Arizona
Well-Known Member
Started this October. Finally finished with labels. Ready to sell, I think. Basic lard recipe. Been fun. My son did the labels for me. All unscented.
No. Recipe came from here. Basic lard. Yes we have tested. So far people like it. Thanx on the labels.Did you come up with the recipe yourself? Have you tested your soap? The labels look pretty.
Started this October. Finally finished with labels. Ready to sell, I think. Basic lard recipe. Been fun. My son did the labels for me. All unscented.
yes. on the side/back of the label.Cute!
I am assuming all the important information is on the back?
These are unscented. Playing around with that now. Thanx.They are very pretty, I like the labels too.
A dampening note, though. If you have only been making soap for a month or so it is problematic to start selling because you don't know what you don't know yet. Whether the formula is a good/safe one, whether the scents (if you use them) will stick, whether the soap will discolor, whether you used the wrong ingredients/techniques/storage environments and they will get DOS, lots of other issues. It is generally recommended here that people soap for a year before they start to sell. I don't know if that specific amount of time is the right one, but I think a month-ish is not.
Thanx for the input. Let's try these c$$s words. San Antonio Tejas. Bean and rice. dern. lol.Your recipe looks really good! And you seem like a really nice person. You probably have made beautiful glass for many years, tried soapmaking as an experienced craftsperson, and had friends/family say "this is amazing, you should sell it!" (the latter happens to almost all of us, I think, as so many soap buyers otherwise only have experience with syndets, not CP).
The problem is that with such little time under your belt you really don't know what will happen with your soap down the line, after it is in the possession of the person who bought it. For example, there are all kinds of ways we know of for DOS (rancidity) to develop, not to mention the ones that we don't understand. Around here, a 4 oz bar of soap sells for $7-$10 at farmer's market/street fairs. Someone who shucks out that kind of money will be really bummed out if their soap starts to develop yucky, bad smelling discoloration and becomes unusable.
And a person who could have become a lifetime buyer of handmade soap will instead warn others never to use the fancy foofoo bars because they are kind of disgusting, definitely not as good as the stuff the big companies sell, even though they cost ten times as much. That hurts all of us who sell or gift soap, we are all ambassadors for the **** stuff because we love it, almost no one gets rich from selling soap.
At this point I have made several hundred batches and things still go wrong that I don't expect for reasons (less frequently these days) that I don't understand. If you're human like the rest of us you'll never get it completely right. But if you're like the rest of us you'll also make more than a few mistakes over the next months, better not to have them on the sales rack.
I really do wish you well and hope you continue to contribute here. I like hearing your "voice", I hope my posts on this thread do not make it seem otherwise.
ETA: d**n, the cussing censor is tough around here! I've never had that bleeped before.
Ok then. Here ya go!I wanna see the back of the label! Like how do you list ingredients and how the label sticks together at the end.
Ok then. Here ya go
Thank you. I saw these labels on here somewhere and ordered from Amazon. My son is a wiz with printing things. They stick pretty well, even on bars that are too fat to allow the label to stick to itself on the back.I'm starting planning for my first table at a 'semi-public' event* in March or April, about one year after I started my soaping journey, and I hope I can get my labels looking as nice as yours do.
-=-
*meaning we probably know 3/4 of the people at the event; kind of a friends-n-family roll-out of the business at an event my wife's lace guild holds each spring.
good idea. thanxBe aware that colorants, even natural ones, can be allergens & irritants too, so listing them would help people avoid things they can't use.
The counterpoint is that the lye is actually gone - it has reacted with the fats and oils to make soap - so saying saponified oils is ok too, I think.Hi,
The way I approach it. Anything on the inside should be on the label. Sodium Hydroxide "LYE" as well.
there are labels on prominent e-sites. That do not list "LYE" at all. It is on mine. Just seems proper.
I list it as "sodium hydroxide". Does not have the fear/shock value as the word "LYE". Just my $00.02
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