cerelife
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2010
- Messages
- 955
- Reaction score
- 1,343
...or maybe I'm just doing something wrong?
How do you get rid of the "drag marks" from cutting your soap? I don't really know how to describe this, so I'll add a pic of some I cut today. You can see what I mean esp on the bar on the right.
This never really used to be an issue, but the more I want my soap to be 'pretty' the more this bugs me...and ironically, the addition of micas/oxides seem to exacerbate this problem for me!
I usually cut my (fully gelled) soap after 18-24 hours, but I have tried waiting 48 hours since I began using colorants. But I still have a stickiness factor when I use a straight cutter, making the cutter want to stick to the soap slices and creating these marks. I don't want to wait so long to cut them that I can't get a nice deep indention with my stamp (it seems to work best for me to stamp the day after cutting to get a clean outline) or have to up my weight-lifting routine in order to cut them...these soap logs are pretty hard, just sticky. And the bars cure to the exact soap I want, so I don't want to change my signature recipe.
Here's what I've tried so far:
Washing the cutter between slices
Spraying the cutter with alcohol between slices
Neither was very effective.
I've thought of "washing" the bars after a couple of weeks cure time, but I sometimes use rubber stamps coated in mica for decoration, and doing this would destroy the design.
Any thoughts/ideas would be very welcome!
How do you get rid of the "drag marks" from cutting your soap? I don't really know how to describe this, so I'll add a pic of some I cut today. You can see what I mean esp on the bar on the right.
This never really used to be an issue, but the more I want my soap to be 'pretty' the more this bugs me...and ironically, the addition of micas/oxides seem to exacerbate this problem for me!
I usually cut my (fully gelled) soap after 18-24 hours, but I have tried waiting 48 hours since I began using colorants. But I still have a stickiness factor when I use a straight cutter, making the cutter want to stick to the soap slices and creating these marks. I don't want to wait so long to cut them that I can't get a nice deep indention with my stamp (it seems to work best for me to stamp the day after cutting to get a clean outline) or have to up my weight-lifting routine in order to cut them...these soap logs are pretty hard, just sticky. And the bars cure to the exact soap I want, so I don't want to change my signature recipe.
Here's what I've tried so far:
Washing the cutter between slices
Spraying the cutter with alcohol between slices
Neither was very effective.
I've thought of "washing" the bars after a couple of weeks cure time, but I sometimes use rubber stamps coated in mica for decoration, and doing this would destroy the design.
Any thoughts/ideas would be very welcome!
Last edited: