Added more details like region, editing for typos and clarity.
Quick Intro:
I've been making soaps for fun & home use for over a year. I still read all about soaping and can't stop browsing people's creations and videos. I feeling very much like this is my long lost hobby.
The kids have fun making formulas, wearing the science gear (safety equip), chosing molds and overall learning about science. I get to explore a science that I missed out on in school (studied physics & geography).
We mainly make CP & HP and have done some Melt & Pour, but it's not a good option because of price & availability. Unless I can make or import decent amounts of quality M&P cheaply (which I have not been able to do).
My Soaping level is perhaps unorthodox. I've made and tested many many different formula and have much experience with standard CP & HP, but not fancy things like layers. I've gotten to the properties of the materials quite well, though I have virtually no experience with scents or coloring.
My issue is that I can't overcome one big problem: I live in the Middle East, where soaping not popular and hence some important materials cannot be found -without much trouble.
This boils down into 2 smaller, but still big problems:
1. I can't get materials I need.
Industrial Suppliers are unable to sell me less than 1 Metric Ton of each material, which I can't afford, store or use in time before expiry.
Online suppliers are prohibitively expensive. Importing 20KG of M&P is cost prohibitive. Typically I've found that shipping costs from the US are about 3x the price of the product.
Palm Oil: Also, we don't get Palm Oil, only Palm Olein (the worst part of Palm Oil) which is definitely not sustainably farmed. Palm Olein is used for frying so it's always liquid and a 100% Palm Olein bar barely lathers, even when reinforced with glycerine & cured for 1 month.
Here is an example for importing Palm Oil Eg. Importing 16KG (35lbs) of Palm oil from Bramble berry will cost $ 227 or $6.5 per LB, before import taxes and port clearance charges.
A friend from the US can bring a limited quantity of palm & other goodies whenever he visits, but this will never be more than once a year and perhaps not every year. He did bring some goodies a while ago and I used the palmto make a small batch to prove that I wasn't crazy and that I could do it (turned out great actually) whereas the rest made about 5 KG of bars for the kids to sell at kids charity fundraiser. This was the only time I ever used fragrances and colors.
Tallow: I've tried replacing palm with Tallow but cows are not local to this region. The animals are slaughtered centrally when imported and local butchers that get the processed parts are uncooperative The parts are quite lean by this stage anyhow. Tallow works out slightly more expensive than pomace, the supply is quite tight and I'm not very experienced in rendering it. I did make a 1 KG batch that I still have. It looks right but still has the smell (reminds me of unflavored icecream). It makes a WONDERFUL 100% soap and I've used it successfully to replace palm, though the price and availability make it so expensive and time consuming. (ok I admit we had a mountain of fun making it :shh
I have another option which is reasonably priced & more available: Lamb Tallow. From what I've read, it seems this is vastly inferior to Beef Tallow & may not be a suitable 1-1 replacement for Palm Oil.
All hope is not lost. I can get a hold of *some* superfats like coco, mango, shea butters and avocado oil from a local specialty supplier, albeit of unreliable quality (I feel the oils are diluted, especially avocado) and at extortionist prices. He quite literally tells me not to buy too much because of the high cost (He runs into the supply issues I do). I mean, the guy literally sells a product called "Snake Oil".
2. No-one to sell too.
And this affects #1 also. I realize this can't be self sustaining without a great deal of time & effort to educate people or setup distribution. Without looking at this as a business, I can't financially justify "doing it right" and importing commercial quantities.
Having said this, I don't necessarily want to turn this into a business. I'm very happy to keep on doing it as my hobby and who knows, maybe one day I can recover some costs after making a nice big batch for someone's special occasion.
So I'm basically limited to using the oils in the supermarkets and here is the list (pretty much all soft oils) with their comparative prices:
I'm sure they seem a bit lop sided (grape seed being more expensive than others), but the prices largely reflect their popularity with the more popular items being cheaper and more available.
I've made many formulations with supermarket oils with some, limited, success. The soaps are either too harsh (my testers seem to really hate superfatting because of the "hard to wash off" effect), too soft, stink (80% Canola or sunflower with 20% Coconut), barely lather or never solidify. How does Bronner's unscented liquid soap smell so naturally nice!
The best formula I made was a mix of Coconut/sun/canola/oo/castor/ghee/sesame that came out almost translucent, great smell, lovely to use but way too soft. Waaay too soft, even after a 4 months cure, its still softer than taffy. Already tried to source some Stearic but ran into Small Problem #1.
125g of this uncolored, unscented bar costs about 3.5 times the price of a commercial soap (most of which are PO+PKO) bar, even when I was trying to go heavier on the cheaper oils.
TL;DR: Help Please!
If you've gotten this far, thank you for your patience.
Here is a summary of my problems:
1. Can't get Palm Oil for solid soap
2. Can't find a fairly cheap (not 100% olive) formula to make Liquid Soap that doesn't stink
I'd really like to overcome these obsctacles so I can start dabbling in colors and scents. I'm missing out on a big part of soaping till I can get the basics sorted out.
It's time for me to re-evaluate the reality of my situation; Is there a reasonable way I can make this work? Have I missed some easy to find materials or formula ? Or is it just time to move on?
I welcome your suggestions and opinions.
Quick Intro:
I've been making soaps for fun & home use for over a year. I still read all about soaping and can't stop browsing people's creations and videos. I feeling very much like this is my long lost hobby.
The kids have fun making formulas, wearing the science gear (safety equip), chosing molds and overall learning about science. I get to explore a science that I missed out on in school (studied physics & geography).
We mainly make CP & HP and have done some Melt & Pour, but it's not a good option because of price & availability. Unless I can make or import decent amounts of quality M&P cheaply (which I have not been able to do).
My Soaping level is perhaps unorthodox. I've made and tested many many different formula and have much experience with standard CP & HP, but not fancy things like layers. I've gotten to the properties of the materials quite well, though I have virtually no experience with scents or coloring.
My issue is that I can't overcome one big problem: I live in the Middle East, where soaping not popular and hence some important materials cannot be found -without much trouble.
This boils down into 2 smaller, but still big problems:
1. I can't get materials I need.
Industrial Suppliers are unable to sell me less than 1 Metric Ton of each material, which I can't afford, store or use in time before expiry.
Online suppliers are prohibitively expensive. Importing 20KG of M&P is cost prohibitive. Typically I've found that shipping costs from the US are about 3x the price of the product.
Palm Oil: Also, we don't get Palm Oil, only Palm Olein (the worst part of Palm Oil) which is definitely not sustainably farmed. Palm Olein is used for frying so it's always liquid and a 100% Palm Olein bar barely lathers, even when reinforced with glycerine & cured for 1 month.
Here is an example for importing Palm Oil Eg. Importing 16KG (35lbs) of Palm oil from Bramble berry will cost $ 227 or $6.5 per LB, before import taxes and port clearance charges.
A friend from the US can bring a limited quantity of palm & other goodies whenever he visits, but this will never be more than once a year and perhaps not every year. He did bring some goodies a while ago and I used the palmto make a small batch to prove that I wasn't crazy and that I could do it (turned out great actually) whereas the rest made about 5 KG of bars for the kids to sell at kids charity fundraiser. This was the only time I ever used fragrances and colors.
Tallow: I've tried replacing palm with Tallow but cows are not local to this region. The animals are slaughtered centrally when imported and local butchers that get the processed parts are uncooperative The parts are quite lean by this stage anyhow. Tallow works out slightly more expensive than pomace, the supply is quite tight and I'm not very experienced in rendering it. I did make a 1 KG batch that I still have. It looks right but still has the smell (reminds me of unflavored icecream). It makes a WONDERFUL 100% soap and I've used it successfully to replace palm, though the price and availability make it so expensive and time consuming. (ok I admit we had a mountain of fun making it :shh
I have another option which is reasonably priced & more available: Lamb Tallow. From what I've read, it seems this is vastly inferior to Beef Tallow & may not be a suitable 1-1 replacement for Palm Oil.
All hope is not lost. I can get a hold of *some* superfats like coco, mango, shea butters and avocado oil from a local specialty supplier, albeit of unreliable quality (I feel the oils are diluted, especially avocado) and at extortionist prices. He quite literally tells me not to buy too much because of the high cost (He runs into the supply issues I do). I mean, the guy literally sells a product called "Snake Oil".
2. No-one to sell too.
And this affects #1 also. I realize this can't be self sustaining without a great deal of time & effort to educate people or setup distribution. Without looking at this as a business, I can't financially justify "doing it right" and importing commercial quantities.
Having said this, I don't necessarily want to turn this into a business. I'm very happy to keep on doing it as my hobby and who knows, maybe one day I can recover some costs after making a nice big batch for someone's special occasion.
So I'm basically limited to using the oils in the supermarkets and here is the list (pretty much all soft oils) with their comparative prices:
I'm sure they seem a bit lop sided (grape seed being more expensive than others), but the prices largely reflect their popularity with the more popular items being cheaper and more available.
I've made many formulations with supermarket oils with some, limited, success. The soaps are either too harsh (my testers seem to really hate superfatting because of the "hard to wash off" effect), too soft, stink (80% Canola or sunflower with 20% Coconut), barely lather or never solidify. How does Bronner's unscented liquid soap smell so naturally nice!
The best formula I made was a mix of Coconut/sun/canola/oo/castor/ghee/sesame that came out almost translucent, great smell, lovely to use but way too soft. Waaay too soft, even after a 4 months cure, its still softer than taffy. Already tried to source some Stearic but ran into Small Problem #1.
125g of this uncolored, unscented bar costs about 3.5 times the price of a commercial soap (most of which are PO+PKO) bar, even when I was trying to go heavier on the cheaper oils.
TL;DR: Help Please!
If you've gotten this far, thank you for your patience.
Here is a summary of my problems:
1. Can't get Palm Oil for solid soap
2. Can't find a fairly cheap (not 100% olive) formula to make Liquid Soap that doesn't stink
I'd really like to overcome these obsctacles so I can start dabbling in colors and scents. I'm missing out on a big part of soaping till I can get the basics sorted out.
It's time for me to re-evaluate the reality of my situation; Is there a reasonable way I can make this work? Have I missed some easy to find materials or formula ? Or is it just time to move on?
I welcome your suggestions and opinions.
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