kchaystack
Supporting Member
Thank you KC, especially for the recipe, I have trouble with batter staying fluid so I appreciate it!
No problem. I used a 33% lye solution and used less than 10 seconds of blending to just get to emulsion.
Thank you KC, especially for the recipe, I have trouble with batter staying fluid so I appreciate it!
Is it ok to trim the cells for them to look better?
I suspect these cells are caused by more than just using thin fluid soap, but I'd have to try it to know.
In one of her videos she was holding a small dropper bottle of clear liquid and put scattered droplets of liquid on the soap. Not sure what that was, but I wonder if it might have been silicone oil which would work to make "real" cells.
Only watched two of her vids. I can't find this in "Water and Fire", so maybe it was in "Carnaby Street", but couldn't find it there either. I was fast forwarding in an effort to find the spot, and this bit is really brief, so I might have missed it. Grrr.
Right. Makes me want to invest in some cheap paint and canvases.
Glad to hear I'm not the only one! Remember the kid's toy (or maybe this is before your time, you being such a sweet young thing!) where you put a piece of paper on a turntable, turned the turntable on, and drizzled paint over the whirling paper?
Glad to hear I'm not the only one! Remember the kid's toy (or maybe this is before your time, you being such a sweet young thing!) where you put a piece of paper on a turntable, turned the turntable on, and drizzled paint over the whirling paper?
Oops -- it's still around! https://www.amazon.com/dp/B006EQP3JM/?tag=skimlinks_replacement-20
DeeAnna, I saw that too. It is in the Water and Fire video, I found what I think you saw at about 9:25. I thought maybe it was alcohol, but didn't think about a silicone oil. I was also wondering if there was something mixed into her soap batter, because there is a kind of glazing - for lack of a better word - when she is pouring that top layer. It spreads differently than even very thin batter would I think, and there are little bubbles or something that rise to the surface and then leave a different color when they 'pop'. This is right before the dropper part. I haven't tried this yet, so it's all just speculation as I really don't know how thin batter will behave when poured like this.
I popped the cells off my silicone mat today. The tops are covered in ash. Do you suppose a bath will help them? Or maybe I should just flip them over...
I popped the cells off my silicone mat today. The tops are covered in ash. Do you suppose a bath will help them? Or maybe I should just flip them over...
I washed off the ash after I placed the cells and cut the bars.
This has been successful for me. Try it with one cell and see if it works.
http://www.soapmakingforum.com/showthread.php?t=63325
Here is one of her explanations:
"Hello Grace. FYI there is a technique in this piece that no one has asked me about. I believe you are an artist who may find this interesting. On the top water layer, cells were created by the different viscosity's of the colored soap just like the fluid acrylic artists. This is the important part, "Pseudo cells" were also created by dropping 91% isopropol from an eye dropped onto very liquid soap, just barely emulsified. I have also sprayed and drawn the alcohol onto experiential pieces."
Hmmmm, I must not have made the watery ones watery enough.
I'm gonna sit out this month.. wanna tryout the new fragrances and this challenge is not for the new FOs.
The word "cell" is suddenly throwing me. I think it's a case of seeing the word too much in an instance and over thinking - I'll have to make the soap before I understand it in word terms.
Since I hope to start making my cells tomorrow... how does this sound:
1# batch
100% olive oil
Water as 38% of oil (soap calc default)
<5% SF
Technique wise, drizzle one color on top of the other and Clyde slide it into puddles? Am I overthinking?
When I get tired of making cells I'll just pour it all into cavity molds and ignore them for a while (since it will probably take a month or so to harden enough to Unmold). I imagine I'll still end up with more embeds than I need/want and these cells will find there way into many a strange soap combination.
Another question: never mind this. I just found a video of an a painter explaining the technique further and it makes more sense now. Research FTW!
Here is one of her explanations:
"Hello Grace. FYI there is a technique in this piece that no one has asked me about. I believe you are an artist who may find this interesting. On the top water layer, cells were created by the different viscosity's of the colored soap just like the fluid acrylic artists. This is the important part, "Pseudo cells" were also created by dropping 91% isopropol from an eye dropped onto very liquid soap, just barely emulsified. I have also sprayed and drawn the alcohol onto experiential pieces."
Hmmmm, I must not have made the watery ones watery enough.
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