Another thing you can try, but this takes a few months is either a high 70% shea butter bar or a 100% Almond Oil Bar. The problem with 100% Almond Oil soaps is the min 6-month cure before you will get even a hint of lather with a year cure the best, and the same goes for the 70% Shea Bar. Although the shea bar you can start trying for lather at the 4-month cure point, normally it still will not lather much at that point. Both soaps are really nice on fragile skin and are what I use when my hands are giving me trouble. Avocado oil in soaps is wonderful but even with long cure times, I found it just would not lather as a 100% AVO soap.
I agree with Dibbles making her a nice lotion bar to use adding in a percentage of Avocado Oil with includes its own healing properties. I made a diaper rash balm for my grandkids that worked better than anything on the market or what the doctors prescribed which included Tacuma butter and avocado Oil infused with chamomile. Lotion bars with leave a nice protective layer on the hands. I sold a lot of solid lotions to nurses at the Kaiser hospital and also at City of Hope where I did an outdoor market once a week.
ETA: stick with the low superfat in the low CO soap it will also help with the lather. If you can spring for the cost I would get some Sorbitol and use it at 1% of your total batch weight, I found it really worked better than sugar in the low CO soaps which I made and sold. sorbitol powder of course like everything I see the brand I used to buy has almost doubled in price but I just found one that is less per ounce from Spicy World.
I agree with Dibbles making her a nice lotion bar to use adding in a percentage of Avocado Oil with includes its own healing properties. I made a diaper rash balm for my grandkids that worked better than anything on the market or what the doctors prescribed which included Tacuma butter and avocado Oil infused with chamomile. Lotion bars with leave a nice protective layer on the hands. I sold a lot of solid lotions to nurses at the Kaiser hospital and also at City of Hope where I did an outdoor market once a week.
ETA: stick with the low superfat in the low CO soap it will also help with the lather. If you can spring for the cost I would get some Sorbitol and use it at 1% of your total batch weight, I found it really worked better than sugar in the low CO soaps which I made and sold. sorbitol powder of course like everything I see the brand I used to buy has almost doubled in price but I just found one that is less per ounce from Spicy World.
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