I've written this post in my head a number of times, always with a different title. First was going to be Waiting, waiting....I'd done this exact recipe (well, almost), and had unmolded after 24 hours. This time I had to wait 3 full days and I likely could have waited another day, as it was still a bit soft.
The next title was going to be The girl who forgot to swirl, even though it looked kind of cool from the outside.
But then I cut the soaps and they looked great and I was going to title the post Pleased as punch! since I liked the look and there was a strong, fresh fragrance (lemongrass-verbena) (And I should have taken a photo at that point.....).
Then after a few days, I thought I saw DOS, little rusty spots.
And then I went away for a week and came back to brown soap! But not evenly brown, darker on the parts I bevelled. There's a pic of one slice cut in half; it's hard to see the colour difference, but it is lighter on the inside. And strangely, it's still a bit soft.
Soap Calc sheet below; additives were 1 Tbsp clay for the whole batch, then zinc oxide and activated charcoal for the colours. Any idea why the soap was so soft?
Upon rereading the reviews of NDA Lemongrass Verbena, I learned that it discolours...not sure how I missed that the first time.
Before the discoloration, my wife thought it looked like moldy Havarti. Now it's definitely smoked Gouda.
I can see why people make fragrance-free soap.....FOs are such trouble!
The next title was going to be The girl who forgot to swirl, even though it looked kind of cool from the outside.
But then I cut the soaps and they looked great and I was going to title the post Pleased as punch! since I liked the look and there was a strong, fresh fragrance (lemongrass-verbena) (And I should have taken a photo at that point.....).
Then after a few days, I thought I saw DOS, little rusty spots.
And then I went away for a week and came back to brown soap! But not evenly brown, darker on the parts I bevelled. There's a pic of one slice cut in half; it's hard to see the colour difference, but it is lighter on the inside. And strangely, it's still a bit soft.
Soap Calc sheet below; additives were 1 Tbsp clay for the whole batch, then zinc oxide and activated charcoal for the colours. Any idea why the soap was so soft?
Upon rereading the reviews of NDA Lemongrass Verbena, I learned that it discolours...not sure how I missed that the first time.
Before the discoloration, my wife thought it looked like moldy Havarti. Now it's definitely smoked Gouda.
I can see why people make fragrance-free soap.....FOs are such trouble!