Well, you could get a similar look but it’s a different technique. It all depends on what you want to do.So pretty! Could this be done like the watermelon seed soap
https://www.soapmakingforum.com/threads/a-slice-of-watermelon.73818/
just with tiny "logs"?
Thanks!Beautiful soap @Carolyne Thrasher !
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I’ve done it twice now using squeeze bottles and cutoff pipettes. It wasn’t too hard. Just make sure you use a fluid recipe and well behaving fragrance. Have everything laid out and ready to go. The base should be at a light when you pour it into the mold because it will setup a bit more while you bottle up your colors.
My recipe:
30% rice bran
25% canola
25% coconut
15% palm
5% avocado oil
Water:lye was 2:1
Half of the water was coconut milk added to the oils
Also used sodium lactate and kaolin clay
I really like this recipe.
These are my 1st attempts ever. I clipped the pipettes so their opening was bigger because I was afraid of the batter getting to thick to get out. I’ll have to try it next with the narrower opening.Thanks for sharing. Those look incredible! Very different from the tiny “rain drop” affect in the YouTube I posted, but every bit as visually stunning. We’re these your 1st attempts or did it take a few batches to perfect the technique?
Anybody tried this technique? It's obviously ambitious, but if it works, it makes some beautiful soap!
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Not with soy wax. The one thing about a design like this is that you want your base to be fluid enough to quickly close in around the trail of the batter from the squeeze bottles. So I’d think no heavier than medium trace. It never hurts to try, and would be interesting to see how it works.I haven't tried any techniques with squeeze bottles or pipettes mainly because I'm not confident that the batter will remain thin enough to be useful in either of those situations. All the you-tube videos seem to be working with super-runny soap batter and mine never is. I think the soy wax is a thicker constituent than most, and if I soap super-cool it would become thicker and thus harder to do techniques such as this.
As I'm writing this I'm considering making up two different batches of soap - and using them to create one design. Not dissimilar to the 'ghost swirl' technique I guess, but i could have the main batch using my soy wax, and the 'design' component using softer oils - thus allowing me to use squeezy bottles and things. The design would be 'held together' or encapsulated by the main batter with the soy wax.
I hope this isn't too much of a digression from your thread DW - but I wonder if anyone has ever tried such a thing?
Well, I just ordered, like, a million pipettes, so I guess I better figure this out. To your and kiwi’s points, my batters are so darned inconsistent as to how quickly they move, I’ll need a plan b in my pocket.Not with soy wax. The one thing about a design like this is that you want your base to be fluid enough to quickly close in around the trail of the batter from the squeeze bottles. So I’d think no heavier than medium trace. It never hurts to try, and would be interesting to see how it works.
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