Hello
New member here. Inspired by the numerous companies constantly advertising with their super soaps, I though, I can make this myself.
Wrong! At least up till now. The issue is both getting the right consistency of the soap and obtaining a scent that is barrable.
Consistency: I have used the SoapCalc.net calculator to get the correct amounts of starting materials of a soap consisting of:
olive oil 45%, coconut oil 25%, sunflower oil 25% and beewax 5%, with 5% superfat.
The soap got quite thick before I poured it. The "cured" soap is somewhat "goopy"
The smell isn't what I expected either from what was expected from the scent of the mixture of the essential oils, which were cedar (atlantica) 35%, juniper 20%, cypress 20%, cornmint 15%, camphor 10% at ~20g/kg. It was a rather faint glue like smell!
Looking at the structures of the scent active components in some of the common essential oils, give way to as why the end product scent does not comply with the expected woody notes. The main contributors to the odour of Cedar Atlantica, Vestitenone and 4-acetyl-1-methylcyclohexene among others, contain ketone moieties, which are prone to undergo hydrolysis under the alkaline conditions of saponification.
How do you people obtain soap with a woody scent?
And any input on the soap consistency part will be highly appreciated.
\Erik
New member here. Inspired by the numerous companies constantly advertising with their super soaps, I though, I can make this myself.
Wrong! At least up till now. The issue is both getting the right consistency of the soap and obtaining a scent that is barrable.
Consistency: I have used the SoapCalc.net calculator to get the correct amounts of starting materials of a soap consisting of:
olive oil 45%, coconut oil 25%, sunflower oil 25% and beewax 5%, with 5% superfat.
The soap got quite thick before I poured it. The "cured" soap is somewhat "goopy"
The smell isn't what I expected either from what was expected from the scent of the mixture of the essential oils, which were cedar (atlantica) 35%, juniper 20%, cypress 20%, cornmint 15%, camphor 10% at ~20g/kg. It was a rather faint glue like smell!
Looking at the structures of the scent active components in some of the common essential oils, give way to as why the end product scent does not comply with the expected woody notes. The main contributors to the odour of Cedar Atlantica, Vestitenone and 4-acetyl-1-methylcyclohexene among others, contain ketone moieties, which are prone to undergo hydrolysis under the alkaline conditions of saponification.
How do you people obtain soap with a woody scent?
And any input on the soap consistency part will be highly appreciated.
\Erik