Hi everyone!
So I’m new to soap making, I’ve done some research but I’ve convinced myself that I don’t know enough. I have a few questions about lye because I feel crazy and feel like everything in my house is now contaminated with lye and I’m a walking lye contaminator! I even freaked out after having touched the plastic wrap covering the raw so after molding then getting a bug out of my eye. I legit almost went to the emergency room! My poor boyfriend was trying to calm me down but I was so paranoid. (I also have OCD so this is clearly the worst hobby I could have possibly chosen). But I love the process and love everything about it thus far! I just need to know everything there is!
So! For questions:
Would I know if I got Lye on myself?
Am I able to cross contaminate if I had Lye on myself?
What vinegar do I use for cleaning?
How long is lye well, “LYE” for?
Basically, I want to know everything there is for Lye and touching and safety!
This probably won’t be my last post! Haha thank you all!
Welcome. Training yourself to be lye safety conscious in a reasonable and not overly excessive way might be a challenge, but your OCD may work in your favor (as opposed to folks who may tend to be lackadaisical
about lye.)
Question #1
Would I know if I got Lye on myself? At first when it splashes (from mixing solution or from raw soap from stirring too vigorously), you may not realize it at first, but it will start stinging or tingling or itching or burning. Then you will know. If it is the lye granules or crystals or flakes (in the dry form), you may not notice at first either, but humidity in the air can activate it on your skin, as can any other form of liquid, and you will get the same sensations I already mentioned. If your skin is very sensitive to touch, you may feel it sooner; if not, you will feel it later. IMMEDIATELY rinse with a lot of cool water. I stop what I am doing and go rinse the moment I know there was any splash, even if I am not sure it touched my skin.
I strongly suggest that prior to starting a soap making project, that you cover your work surface with washable or disposable covering (towels, table cloth of some sort, paper, whatever you prefer) to take any spills or splashes. I use both an oilcloth table cloth & old towels on top of that. The towels go into the wash after spills dry up. If I spill dry lye, I stop what I am doing and clean that up immediately; I am fortunate that I almost never spill dry lye, but it has happened. Clean up depends on the spilled surface as well as how much. Towels get rinsed with water. Sweeping up if appropriate, depends of amount of spill & the hand broom gets rinsed with cool water. Vinegar (regular white household vinegar) spray and mop for flooring. DON'T make soap on bare hardwood flooring (use protective covering on floor; spilled lye will eat away at the finish (I know someone which this happened to.)
Question #2
Am I able to cross contaminate if I had Lye on myself? Well, to a degree. IF you spill dry lye on yourself, while in the process of walking to the sink to rinse off, the potential for some of the granules, flakes or crystals to fall off along the way does exist. So you may want to do a quick mop-up to be on the safe side. But if it was a small amount spilled onto you, the amount that may fall onto the floor in that little distance would be minimal, so the mop up would not need to be extensive.
However, AFTER you have rinsed off, no more cross contamination is likely.
Where cross contamination should be a concern is intermingling of equipment. Do not use your lye solution container for food. ALWAYS rinse it well with water prior to storage. ALWAYS label it if you are not going to be using it immediately, and even then, I strongly urge you to have your lye solution vessel labeled at all times, even when empty so no one ever uses it for any other purpose.
Question #3
What vinegar do I use for cleaning? Plain white household vinegar that you can buy in any grocery store or Dollar store or wherever you buy vinegar. (Not the apple cider vinegar, although it would work, too, but it's usually more costly and not necessary. But if that's all you have on hand, it will also work.)
Question #4
How long is lye well, “LYE” for? I hope I understand the question correctly. In the soap making process, lye remains active lye until it completes the saponification process of combining with oils to create salts (which is what soap is). If there is not enough oil, active lye remains in the soap, but later combines with carbon dioxide in the air to change and is no longer lye, but sodium carbonate. That secondary process takes more time and depends on factors such as how much excess and how much carbon dioxide and how much time.
Statement #5
Basically, I want to know everything there is for Lye and touching and safety! Eye protection is a must. Gloves are a must. Easy access to running water is a must. Never open a bottle of lye without first donning your gloves. Never weigh out the lye without gloves. Never mix the lye without gloves. Never handle raw soap without gloves. Never un-mold fresh soap without wearing gloves. In fact, wear gloves until you have done a zap test. Once you get a negative zap test, you can rest assured that the soap is safe to touch.
Read this and learn how to do this:
How To Properly/Safely Conduct The Zap/Tongue Test