ResolvableOwl
Notorious Lyear
As already insinuated, colouring soap with indigo (for the OPW challenge) surprised me quite a bit.
[First off, I'm using not dye- or soap-grade indigo, but the chemically modified (water-soluble) food colouring variant E132 (indigo carmine), and I probably shouldn't (replacements already on the way…). But as far as I understand the redox chemistry of indigo and derivatives, this shouldn't matter too much.]
I had pre-dispersed the indigo into HO sunflower oil, and eyeballed my batter to a deep blue colour – just to find out that the indigo turned into a pale yellowish green after CPOP!
After curing for a day or so, the colour changed back to blue(ish), but with a very disappointing colour depth.
I somewhat accepted my fate. This is the sight that was my original submission photo for the challenge:
The indigo zones are hardly visible … hrm
Only today, some eight days after making it, I did a lather test on a small scrap piece – just to witness how soap turns deep blue in my hands! The blue is much stronger beneath the surface! Somehow the colours got muted on the surface (orange and black as well, no soda ash, rather a recipe/oils issue).
Next, I went on, grabbed a planer, and scraped off a few slices off such a scrap bar:
From top to bottom: the subsequent layers planed off (top one is the original surface), thickness each about 1 mm.
Just beneath the surface, the blue was much more intense. But deeper inside, the pale, greenish-yellow colour of the leuco-indigo appears again. However, note that there is a fully bleached rim all around the original outer surface. As of writing, the yellowish core is already turning blue again, once at air contact (like with vat dyeing). So that crazy three-colours-out-of-one-colourant state doesn't hold on for longer than a few minutes.
My conclusion: indigo survives the harsh conditions of saponification best in its (reduced) pale yellow leuco form. Once the lye is eaten up (This was obviously not the case the 11 hours after making when I cut the soap, but (hopefully) is now), the leuco-indigo can be converted back into the blue form by exposure to air/oxygen.
One open question: Which ingredient(s) did reduce the indigo into its leuco form?
My suspects are ROE (of which I added plenty to protect the unreasonable amount of poppy seed oil from rancidity), ascorbic acid (recommended by LyeCalc.com as another antioxidant for the same reason), and aloe vera juice (that I used instead of water).
I would exclude microbial activity (I've seen lactic acid bacteria bleach indigo). As well as sorbitol, though it is a close relative of fructose, and alkaline fructose solution is a popular vet dye reduction bath too. I have no vanilla colour stabiliser in it (sulfur compounds like thiosulfate and dithionite are indigo reducers too).
My instantaneous reaction was to plane my soaps, and gosh! are they blue beneath that crumbly crust! Tomorrow I'll make new photographs and post them into the submission thread.
Have you got discolouration of indigo in one or another form by yourself too?
[First off, I'm using not dye- or soap-grade indigo, but the chemically modified (water-soluble) food colouring variant E132 (indigo carmine), and I probably shouldn't (replacements already on the way…). But as far as I understand the redox chemistry of indigo and derivatives, this shouldn't matter too much.]
I had pre-dispersed the indigo into HO sunflower oil, and eyeballed my batter to a deep blue colour – just to find out that the indigo turned into a pale yellowish green after CPOP!
After curing for a day or so, the colour changed back to blue(ish), but with a very disappointing colour depth.
I somewhat accepted my fate. This is the sight that was my original submission photo for the challenge:
The indigo zones are hardly visible … hrm
Only today, some eight days after making it, I did a lather test on a small scrap piece – just to witness how soap turns deep blue in my hands! The blue is much stronger beneath the surface! Somehow the colours got muted on the surface (orange and black as well, no soda ash, rather a recipe/oils issue).
Next, I went on, grabbed a planer, and scraped off a few slices off such a scrap bar:
From top to bottom: the subsequent layers planed off (top one is the original surface), thickness each about 1 mm.
Just beneath the surface, the blue was much more intense. But deeper inside, the pale, greenish-yellow colour of the leuco-indigo appears again. However, note that there is a fully bleached rim all around the original outer surface. As of writing, the yellowish core is already turning blue again, once at air contact (like with vat dyeing). So that crazy three-colours-out-of-one-colourant state doesn't hold on for longer than a few minutes.
My conclusion: indigo survives the harsh conditions of saponification best in its (reduced) pale yellow leuco form. Once the lye is eaten up (This was obviously not the case the 11 hours after making when I cut the soap, but (hopefully) is now), the leuco-indigo can be converted back into the blue form by exposure to air/oxygen.
One open question: Which ingredient(s) did reduce the indigo into its leuco form?
My suspects are ROE (of which I added plenty to protect the unreasonable amount of poppy seed oil from rancidity), ascorbic acid (recommended by LyeCalc.com as another antioxidant for the same reason), and aloe vera juice (that I used instead of water).
I would exclude microbial activity (I've seen lactic acid bacteria bleach indigo). As well as sorbitol, though it is a close relative of fructose, and alkaline fructose solution is a popular vet dye reduction bath too. I have no vanilla colour stabiliser in it (sulfur compounds like thiosulfate and dithionite are indigo reducers too).
My instantaneous reaction was to plane my soaps, and gosh! are they blue beneath that crumbly crust! Tomorrow I'll make new photographs and post them into the submission thread.
Have you got discolouration of indigo in one or another form by yourself too?