grayceworks
Well-Known Member
On a side-note... anyone have suggestions on good healthy-making things to inhale with steam?
And for a demonstration of the caustic nature of the fumes which does not involve inhaling -- which I can assure you from experience is a 'Very Bad Idea' to quote Jurassic Park -- just take a look at the aluminum vent filters in your stove hood after a few months of making your lye-water on the stove with the vent fan running lol
On a side-note... anyone have suggestions on good healthy-making things to inhale with steam?
Not sure if this is what you mean, but... When I get a stuffy nose, I like to put one drop each of peppermint, eucalyptus, and rosemary (or 2-3 drops of an essential oil blend for breathing) on a bowl of steaming hot water & inhale the steam (with a towel over your head to make it like a mini-sauna). Then I blow my nose and feel all better :-D You could use any skin-safe essential oil that way if you just wanted to enjoy the benefits of the essential oil in a different way.
Yes, Jules, sometimes Milk or beer or whatever can be a little stinky when mixed with lye. I think your soap will be perfectly fine!
And for a demonstration of the caustic nature of the fumes which does not involve inhaling -- which I can assure you from experience is a 'Very Bad Idea' to quote Jurassic Park -- just take a look at the aluminum vent filters in your stove hood after a few months of making your lye-water on the stove with the vent fan running lol
Those fumes are nasty and make me cough horribly. Now I freeze ALL of my liquids into ice cubes and don't get any fumes at all when I mix them with lye.
After a day of research, I wanted to make soap. And then I found this thread. I used lye-based drain cleaner a few times years ago and thought it was absolutely awful. I'd hate to make a business or hobby of anything that smells so bad.
Also, I think not as a renter (I do not want to replace expensive components of someone else's home) with a bird, a cat, and my own health to protect--unless there's a way to prevent the toxicity and corrosion. 'MagicalMysterySoap' said ice cubes help. Have you tried them?
The only location in my apartment that makes sense to me is a bathroom with the vent on and door closed, but there are probably metal fan blades in the wall that could rust, and there are metal fixtures throughout the bathroom. Additionally, the bathroom may take a while to completely air out. A WWII style vapor filter may protect my lungs, but the bathroom may be unusable for a day?
After a day of research, I wanted to make soap. And then I found this thread. The ice cube idea is encouraging, but I don't have space for ice cube trays. Maybe just refrigerated water would help enough. Or water put in the freezer for a while. I don't know how long it would take a quart or so of water to freeze, but 4-12 hours in the freezer seems maybe a good range to test.
After a day of research, I wanted to make soap. And then I found this thread. I used lye-based drain cleaner a few times years ago and thought it was absolutely awful. I'd hate to make a business or hobby of anything that smells so bad.
Also, I think not as a renter (I do not want to replace expensive components of someone else's home) with a bird, a cat, and my own health to protect--unless there's a way to prevent the toxicity and corrosion. 'MagicalMysterySoap' said ice cubes help. Have you tried them?
The only location in my apartment that makes sense to me is a bathroom with the vent on and door closed, but there are probably metal fan blades in the wall that could rust, and there are metal fixtures throughout the bathroom. Additionally, the bathroom may take a while to completely air out. A WWII style vapor filter may protect my lungs, but the bathroom may be unusable for a day?
After a day of research, I wanted to make soap. And then I found this thread. The ice cube idea is encouraging, but I don't have space for ice cube trays. Maybe just refrigerated water would help enough. Or water put in the freezer for a while. I don't know how long it would take a quart or so of water to freeze, but 4-12 hours in the freezer seems maybe a good range to test.
Waiting to see if you start a new thread, then I will leave my answer
Being brand new to the forum, Jennifer may not know exactly how to start a new thread yet....
Jennifer, when you click into any of our subforums, such as the Lye Based Soap Forum that we are in here at the moment, up at the top right of the page you'll see a little brown box that says, "Post New Thread", which I've circled below:
View attachment 40398
Just click on that, type the title that you'd like to name your thread in the title box, then post your whatever you'd like to say in the main text box area, then hit the Post button as normal.
For what it's worth, lye fumes are only volatile and smelly when the solution is first mixed with the water and things are really hot. When cooled down there are no fumes or smell. You'll be able to use the room you mix your lye in the same day once aired out. It doesn't take long if you've got some ventilation going on.
Also for what it's worth, I've been making soap for 13+ years and so far all my metal fixtures are fine wherever I've mixed my lye, such as in my bathroom with the vent fan on, on top of my stove with the vent hood fan on, and in my garage right next to my parked truck and washing machine/dryer.... and all are well- there's been no corrosion.......even though I don't use ice cubes. I just mix my lye in room temp water.
If you'd like to mix your lye with ice cubes, but have no room ice cube trays, just buy a bag of ice at the grocery store. It's pretty inexpensive.
IrishLass
My page is not showing a 'Post New Thread' button above the page numbers. Perhaps it's because I have a basic membership. But people are replying to this thread. So, maybe it's not necessary to create a new post?...
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