G
Guest
I just made my first batch of oven process soap - sorta like crock pot but in the pot in the oven. I have no idea if I reached the right stage so did the zap test and it didn't zap.
I feel like the clever self today. Used a box as the mold, used another box top as a divider and made 2 different batches with one base. One is a crafter choice white tea and ginger scent and a coral mica powder swirl. The other is London for men with a liquid ultramarine purple swirl.
I learned a few things:
Oven process takes twice as long as I budgeted my time for. Please, Lord, forgive me for missing services today.
If I need to eyeball half a recipe, I shoudln't. I did the London for men first as the flash point (another lesson) is higher than the ginger scent. I thought it looked like half. It wasn't. I didn't fill half of the mold.
If you have extra HP soap that needs to be in the mold quickly, it is better to have a prepared mold. Sigh
It seems to me that you need less color with the mica powders to get a deep color than with the liquid ultramarine.
When using a cardboard box top as a divider, hold it down for a bit until the soap sets up to avoid seepage under the bottom of the mold; alternately, line the mold differently, so that the parchment paper goes on the bottom, over the divider and on the bottom of the other side.
Pay attention to the flash point and maybe the fumes given off wont make your head spin.
Nancy-something-or-other has videos I find totally hilarious when I youtube videos on soap making. It seems so real. She starts a video and you watch the whole thing while she makes mistakes, has skill saws with tape on the wire, cuts boards off her kitchen table, can't find her drill. She is so much like me it has my husband laughing uproariously - when I find one I will really share. Sometimes it is so close to home it hurts. I wish I had bookmarked her cause I am not even sure if her name is right.
I feel like the clever self today. Used a box as the mold, used another box top as a divider and made 2 different batches with one base. One is a crafter choice white tea and ginger scent and a coral mica powder swirl. The other is London for men with a liquid ultramarine purple swirl.
I learned a few things:
Oven process takes twice as long as I budgeted my time for. Please, Lord, forgive me for missing services today.
If I need to eyeball half a recipe, I shoudln't. I did the London for men first as the flash point (another lesson) is higher than the ginger scent. I thought it looked like half. It wasn't. I didn't fill half of the mold.
If you have extra HP soap that needs to be in the mold quickly, it is better to have a prepared mold. Sigh
It seems to me that you need less color with the mica powders to get a deep color than with the liquid ultramarine.
When using a cardboard box top as a divider, hold it down for a bit until the soap sets up to avoid seepage under the bottom of the mold; alternately, line the mold differently, so that the parchment paper goes on the bottom, over the divider and on the bottom of the other side.
Pay attention to the flash point and maybe the fumes given off wont make your head spin.
Nancy-something-or-other has videos I find totally hilarious when I youtube videos on soap making. It seems so real. She starts a video and you watch the whole thing while she makes mistakes, has skill saws with tape on the wire, cuts boards off her kitchen table, can't find her drill. She is so much like me it has my husband laughing uproariously - when I find one I will really share. Sometimes it is so close to home it hurts. I wish I had bookmarked her cause I am not even sure if her name is right.