Nurture soap loaf mold/liner

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I recently bought a Nurture 5lb mold and liner. I just received it and I'm a little disappointed in the quality. I know I didn't order the premium mold, but I wasn't expecting this:

The wooden mold is stapled rather than screwed together, which I had no way of knowing from the pictures online. Is this the industry standard for this type of mold?

Also, one side of the liner won't stay up. Is this normal for silicone liners? I thought Nurture liners were thicker and stayed up, which is why I chose this one.

But the thing that really bugs me (which could be purely asthetic, not sure) is that there are some holes along the top edge of the wooden mold in places that I'm assuming has something to do with their woodburning process for their logo. This actually makes me wonder how long the mold will hold up.

Are these things typical? This is my first experience buying a wooden mold and silicone liner.
 

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Have you set the liner on the counter, and had the sides straighten up? It may well be the box is too small.

Nurture have a continuing problem with the boxes not fitting the molds (too short for them).

I've got several, and have had various rodeos trying to get full 18" liners with boxes that fit. Customer service on the issue was .. interesting. You might have better luck.

My last one, I knocked the end board loose so the liner fits, and put duct tape bands around the setup.

The liners, when correctly sized, are great, and sturdy. The original boxes were great too, but the newer ones are less so.
 
I've had Nurture molds for almost as long as I've been making CP soap, and they are still going strong nearly 10 years later. My loaf mold is 9" and my tall/skinny mold is 11". The sides of them are vertical, and the silicone hasn't stretched after hundreds of batches. I also have an 18" loaf mold that I got in a destash from a soapy friend. The liner on that one does tend to bow inward, but does flatten against the walls as the mold is filled, and they don't bow so much that they impede pouring. My molds from Workshop Heritage have a 'softer', floppier silicone liner. To keep the liner in place, I have found that a swipe of vaseline between the liner and the wood works pretty well to keep the liner in place. Maybe that will work for you?

I'm sorry you were disappointed :(
 
I'm not so much disappointed as I am surprised. Maybe I just didn't have realistic expectations. I guess that's what I'm trying to figure out. What's typical and what's not?

My understanding is that the current Nurture liners are thinner/floppier than their previous liners and I can clearly see the difference because the liners shown in older pics and videos (the very ones that sold me on this brand) are definitely thicker/sturdier than this one.

Does anyone else have the holes along the top edges? Will the holes compromise the lifespan of the mold or cause it to break or splinter at some point?
 
the holes in the wood is very typical of plywood. Some wood putty will fill that up and then you can sand it after it's dry.
it is poor craftsmanship on Nurture's side not to take care of that themselves.
But since it is only being used for soap, it should not affect the strength too much. Filling it with wood putty should prevent any chipping.
 
the holes in the wood is very typical of plywood. Some wood putty will fill that up and then you can sand it after it's dry.
it is poor craftsmanship on Nurture's side not to take care of that themselves.
But since it is only being used for soap, it should not affect the strength too much. Filling it with wood putty should prevent any chipping.

Thank you so much for this. DH surprised me yesterday by asking to check out the new mold since it's technically my Christmas gift and I'm not allowed to use it until after Christmas. He likes it. DH said the same thing as you: The holes are typical of plywood because it's layered, unlike the solid wood mold he originally made me as a prototype. DH likes the staples and says that's actually a good thing because screws can crack/split the wood. I had no idea. I am so relieved because I was genuinely unsure what constitutes a good quality mold and now I know and I am super excited to try it out after Christmas.
 
I recently bought a Nurture 5lb mold and liner. I just received it and I'm a little disappointed in the quality. I know I didn't order the premium mold, but I wasn't expecting this:

The wooden mold is stapled rather than screwed together, which I had no way of knowing from the pictures online. Is this the industry standard for this type of mold?

Also, one side of the liner won't stay up. Is this normal for silicone liners? I thought Nurture liners were thicker and stayed up, which is why I chose this one.

But the thing that really bugs me (which could be purely asthetic, not sure) is that there are some holes along the top edge of the wooden mold in places that I'm assuming has something to do with their woodburning process for their logo. This actually makes me wonder how long the mold will hold up.

Are these things typical? This is my first experience buying a wooden mold and silicone liner.
Those "holes" aren't from burning a logo. Looks like that was a piece of scrap from something that wasn't. Repurposed at least.

Staples should just be extra hold for glue. Finishing nails would have been better. But PVA glue holds better that the actual wood/wood cellular bonds. Screws wouldn't be practical for such a small mold.

The liner would be held upright by the soap. Even if a little thin in that area.

I'd be returning it if I was paying for a brand. But value is subjective.
 
I'd be returning it if I was paying for a brand. But value is subjective.
I was considering this. However, I bought the liner separately and it isn't returnable. The wooden mold is still returnable but was $23 and returning it would cost me half that in shipping. Doesn't make since to return it when it'll due. I just won't likely buy more of them when DH can make them.
 

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