- Joined
- Apr 18, 2017
- Messages
- 172
- Reaction score
- 205
I don't understand the food thing either. Some shops sell soaps that look exactly like cup cakes or even whole cakes that you cut slices out complete with "whipped cream" and "cherries"and all!
Dead groovy - yes, the info provided by your certifier looks like standard stuff and is how I do my soap. What I call the after method - after the ingredients have been combined and are actually soap. My understanding is you can also use the (what I call) before method, which tells you the ingredients before they go into the mix and become soap. Some people prefer this because it sounds more natural. You can list your oils and other ingredients in english, recogniseable names. However, you also need to include the INCI names, and this can make the ingredients list rather long. You also must include the less paletable ingredients like sodium hydroxide. Some people "forget"to do this. And you can't put good things like glycerin in because they aren't technically an ingredient (unless you added it extra). So your list might look like - olive oil (oliva europaea), coconut oil (coca nucifera), palm oil (elaeis guineensis), water (aqua), sodium hydroxide, lavender essential
oil (lavendula augustifolia oil) etc etc.
What worried me about the way you set out you sample label is that you have combined the before method with the after method. I don't think this is right. Either you are saying the ingredients are oils and stuff going in, or the soap that comes out after it is mixed together and becomes actual soap. It can't be both at once. In trying to make it both at once it doesn't make sense, and you are identifying the nice natural things like the oils, and not mentioning the sodium hydroxide as a seperate ingredient, in english. I just don't think this is right. But as I have said previously, I am super pernickity, but I might also be right! But I as on my own as you are. I would check with your certifier if you want to be sure you are doing it right.
Dead groovy - yes, the info provided by your certifier looks like standard stuff and is how I do my soap. What I call the after method - after the ingredients have been combined and are actually soap. My understanding is you can also use the (what I call) before method, which tells you the ingredients before they go into the mix and become soap. Some people prefer this because it sounds more natural. You can list your oils and other ingredients in english, recogniseable names. However, you also need to include the INCI names, and this can make the ingredients list rather long. You also must include the less paletable ingredients like sodium hydroxide. Some people "forget"to do this. And you can't put good things like glycerin in because they aren't technically an ingredient (unless you added it extra). So your list might look like - olive oil (oliva europaea), coconut oil (coca nucifera), palm oil (elaeis guineensis), water (aqua), sodium hydroxide, lavender essential
oil (lavendula augustifolia oil) etc etc.
What worried me about the way you set out you sample label is that you have combined the before method with the after method. I don't think this is right. Either you are saying the ingredients are oils and stuff going in, or the soap that comes out after it is mixed together and becomes actual soap. It can't be both at once. In trying to make it both at once it doesn't make sense, and you are identifying the nice natural things like the oils, and not mentioning the sodium hydroxide as a seperate ingredient, in english. I just don't think this is right. But as I have said previously, I am super pernickity, but I might also be right! But I as on my own as you are. I would check with your certifier if you want to be sure you are doing it right.