Hello my friends from the soap forum!
I accidentally sold soap that maybe lye heavy/may have some lye pockets in it. I think the formulation is like 99,99% ok because the chances are small, but I am very concerned about this mistake.
The ph is ok around 8-9, there is no particular sting but some tingle on the skin and it irritates a little. I am a bit confused about supposed and probable lye pockets, because I make my soap in a high speed blender vitamix and the soaps often have air bubbles in them. I just don’t know if the soap is lye heavy or not, or if it just needs more time.
I am pretty stressed out cause I sold this soap to one person, and I almost immediately recalled the product being uncertain(I knew she wasn’t going to use them before Christmas). She is resistant to give them back because they are all wrapped separately in about 20 packages and doesn’t know which one is the one. Any suggestions on how to graciously deal with that?
Can you help me determine if this soap is problematic, see the photos.
1-clay soap: stings the skin a little after 6 weeks cure
2-olive oil pure(just ro show even ok soap have air bubbles because of vitamix): also stings the skin after a month but usually cure much longer, eventhough this soap doesnt usually stings
3-honey soap , I suspect the beeswax didn’t mix properly. It doesn’t sting but the is little white pockets in it.
1 Clay and 2 Honey Soap
450g olive oil
250g coco
100g sunflower
302g water (272g 10% discount for honey)
108g lye
honey: 15g honey
10 g beeswax
Clay: 2 tbs clay in 2 tbs water
I dried these soap in an appartment building locker that has open ceiling connecting to other lockers so air goes through, with a fan directly blowing on them, with about 50% moisture. I wonder if this place is problematic because every soap I dry there seems to have soda ash, stings or be lye heavy after a month, eventhough some of them turn ok after a while. I have never had soda ash on my olive oil soap before, and it is the same recipe. Maybe the problem is the high speed blender?
I accidentally sold soap that maybe lye heavy/may have some lye pockets in it. I think the formulation is like 99,99% ok because the chances are small, but I am very concerned about this mistake.
The ph is ok around 8-9, there is no particular sting but some tingle on the skin and it irritates a little. I am a bit confused about supposed and probable lye pockets, because I make my soap in a high speed blender vitamix and the soaps often have air bubbles in them. I just don’t know if the soap is lye heavy or not, or if it just needs more time.
I am pretty stressed out cause I sold this soap to one person, and I almost immediately recalled the product being uncertain(I knew she wasn’t going to use them before Christmas). She is resistant to give them back because they are all wrapped separately in about 20 packages and doesn’t know which one is the one. Any suggestions on how to graciously deal with that?
Can you help me determine if this soap is problematic, see the photos.
1-clay soap: stings the skin a little after 6 weeks cure
2-olive oil pure(just ro show even ok soap have air bubbles because of vitamix): also stings the skin after a month but usually cure much longer, eventhough this soap doesnt usually stings
3-honey soap , I suspect the beeswax didn’t mix properly. It doesn’t sting but the is little white pockets in it.
1 Clay and 2 Honey Soap
450g olive oil
250g coco
100g sunflower
302g water (272g 10% discount for honey)
108g lye
honey: 15g honey
10 g beeswax
Clay: 2 tbs clay in 2 tbs water
I dried these soap in an appartment building locker that has open ceiling connecting to other lockers so air goes through, with a fan directly blowing on them, with about 50% moisture. I wonder if this place is problematic because every soap I dry there seems to have soda ash, stings or be lye heavy after a month, eventhough some of them turn ok after a while. I have never had soda ash on my olive oil soap before, and it is the same recipe. Maybe the problem is the high speed blender?
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