A
amd
I just squealed. Those are lovely soaps. You can send them to me and make new batches
Lol! Thank you very much, Ok, I will leave them and learn to love themI just squealed. Those are lovely soaps. You can send them to me and make new batches
Lol, that's too funny! Good for her!I've only done a few craft shows. I think there are probably people who would not buy the bar because of them, but also people would buy the bar because of them. Just like there will be some people who won't buy b/c they don't like blue, and some who like blue. I think the name and presentation can also play into it, to give it a "this is on purpose" feeling. Like, you could name that "Antique Wedgewood" or "Grandma's China" or something, to give the impression that you WANTED it to have that antique/vintage look.
On a soap mailing list I was on, one person had gotten tunneling in her soap - basically the soap gets too hot and it separates in the middle. So rather than rebatching, she sliced the bars and painted the jagged hole in the middle with gold mica and called it Gold Mine Soap and sold it for twice the cost of her regular "perfect" bars.
I've never had someone mention them at all, so I can't say for sure that if they don't buy it's because of how they look - because brightly colored is my market base. For me the colors draw them in, and the scent gets them to buy.As mentioned before...I do not sell my soaps, so this is merely out of curiosity...for those of you that do sell your soaps, do people still buy them with glycerin rivers in them? I hope to one day be at a point where I would feel comfortable asking for money for them, but that certainly ain't today!! Haha!
Enter your email address to join: