needsoaphelp
New Member
Hi all,
I've never made a soap from scratch before, so apologies if anything I'm asking is nonsensical!
I'm trying to make soap for an art project, so unlike a soap product, I'm really not concerned with the usability of the soap. I really just want a soap that is super sweaty. I don't care at all about color and I would like it to be as scentless as possible.
I want to try two soap bases, so I have two main questions:
1. Before, I've used a generic glycerine soap base that I purchased on amazon, but I noticed that it starts to shrivel and the surface starts to crystallize after a while. The sweating was also quite slow to start and stopped once the soap started to crystallize. Ideally, I would like something that starts to sweat as soon as it's popped out of the mold and can continuously sweat for at least a few months. Is this something that can be changed in the recipe, ie; adding additional liquid glycerin to the soap base, or is it really an atmospheric variable?
2. Conceptually, I would prefer to use a beef tallow base for the soap. Based on what I'm seeing online, I can make a soap with just beef tallow, lye, and water. Is that correct? Also, it seems like just this wouldn't be enough to make a sweaty soap, so can I just add tons of glycerine? Are there other ways to make it hydroscopic? As long as I can take the soap out of the mold, I don't care about hardness.
Thank you for any tips or help that you might have!
I've never made a soap from scratch before, so apologies if anything I'm asking is nonsensical!
I'm trying to make soap for an art project, so unlike a soap product, I'm really not concerned with the usability of the soap. I really just want a soap that is super sweaty. I don't care at all about color and I would like it to be as scentless as possible.
I want to try two soap bases, so I have two main questions:
1. Before, I've used a generic glycerine soap base that I purchased on amazon, but I noticed that it starts to shrivel and the surface starts to crystallize after a while. The sweating was also quite slow to start and stopped once the soap started to crystallize. Ideally, I would like something that starts to sweat as soon as it's popped out of the mold and can continuously sweat for at least a few months. Is this something that can be changed in the recipe, ie; adding additional liquid glycerin to the soap base, or is it really an atmospheric variable?
2. Conceptually, I would prefer to use a beef tallow base for the soap. Based on what I'm seeing online, I can make a soap with just beef tallow, lye, and water. Is that correct? Also, it seems like just this wouldn't be enough to make a sweaty soap, so can I just add tons of glycerine? Are there other ways to make it hydroscopic? As long as I can take the soap out of the mold, I don't care about hardness.
Thank you for any tips or help that you might have!