"...Lye made from wood ash is potassium hydroxide...."
Actually it's going to be mostly potassium carbonate, possibly with some sodium carbonate depending on the vegetable matter that you used to make the ashes. Wood ash lye can be converted to the hydroxide by reacting the carbonate solution with lime.
Back to answering the OPs question:
I'm in the camp of those who use mostly FOs in soap, but I often use EOs in leave-on products. I use EOs in my shave soap too because I like how EOs work in that type of product. The wide variety of FOs to choose from and the (usually) lower cost of FOs make it a no brainer for me to use them in soap.
I too have gotten the slumped shoulders and the disappointed "oh" from a few "crunchy granola" friends when I use something in my products that they don't think is crunchy enough -- FOs and EDTA in soap and a real emulsifier in lotion rather than beeswax and borax come to mind. (My family knows just how good they've got it -- I get no complaints from them!)
I too have yet to find a way of dealing with it that works. I've come to the conclusion I'm not going to convince someone to abandon their opinion that my stuff isn't "natural" enough to suit them. Opinions like this are knee-jerk reactions, not thoughtfully reasoned-out decisions. So .... mostly I just smile, politely answer any questions with short factual answers, and move on down the conversational road. I just cannot wrap my mind around being put in the position of feeling that I need to meet someone else's philosophical expectations. If that's how they feel, then don't take my soap ... they can make it themselves!
That said, if someone asked me as a favor to use EOs in soap, I'd do it for a good friend or close family member. It would sure be nice if they would foot the bill for the extra cost, as others have suggested.
Actually it's going to be mostly potassium carbonate, possibly with some sodium carbonate depending on the vegetable matter that you used to make the ashes. Wood ash lye can be converted to the hydroxide by reacting the carbonate solution with lime.
Back to answering the OPs question:
I'm in the camp of those who use mostly FOs in soap, but I often use EOs in leave-on products. I use EOs in my shave soap too because I like how EOs work in that type of product. The wide variety of FOs to choose from and the (usually) lower cost of FOs make it a no brainer for me to use them in soap.
I too have gotten the slumped shoulders and the disappointed "oh" from a few "crunchy granola" friends when I use something in my products that they don't think is crunchy enough -- FOs and EDTA in soap and a real emulsifier in lotion rather than beeswax and borax come to mind. (My family knows just how good they've got it -- I get no complaints from them!)
I too have yet to find a way of dealing with it that works. I've come to the conclusion I'm not going to convince someone to abandon their opinion that my stuff isn't "natural" enough to suit them. Opinions like this are knee-jerk reactions, not thoughtfully reasoned-out decisions. So .... mostly I just smile, politely answer any questions with short factual answers, and move on down the conversational road. I just cannot wrap my mind around being put in the position of feeling that I need to meet someone else's philosophical expectations. If that's how they feel, then don't take my soap ... they can make it themselves!
That said, if someone asked me as a favor to use EOs in soap, I'd do it for a good friend or close family member. It would sure be nice if they would foot the bill for the extra cost, as others have suggested.
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