@IrishLass i have aBUNCH of questions. (Please and thank you!)
What are the dimensions of your mold? It looks like you might disassemble / assemble periodically since you have the A B thing going? How does that work?
It's a convertible, dual log/slab mold, and - yes - you are correct- it disassembles/assembles.
Here's a post with pics of what it looks like when in log mode, when in slab mode and completely disassembled.
The overall (slab) dimensions are 10" long x 7 3/4" wide x 2 1/2" tall. When in log mode, it makes one or two logs that are 10" x 3.5" wide x 2.5" tall each.
In slab mode it can make either nine 3.5" wide by 2.5" tall by however thick bars, or 18 3.5" wide by 2.5" tall by 1 1/4" thick bars of soap, depending on how high I fill the mold up with batter.
In log mode, I can get anywhere from four to eight 2.5" x 3.5" x 1/14" bars if I pour only enough batter to fill one or both of the log cavities only up to 1 1/4" deep, and I can get anywhere from 7 to 8 to 9 to 10 to 14 to 16 to 18 to 20 bars that are 3.5" wide by 2.5" tall by however thick, depending on if I fill only one log cavity or both cavities all the way up to the top, and how thick or thin I cut them.
It's quite a versatile mold, and also my favorite out of all the molds I own. If I were forced to get rid of all of my molds but only keep one, this is the mold I would keep. I've been soaping with it since 2006, and it's still going strong even though it looks worse for the wear. lol
Clarice said:
Did you make your wooden mold yourself? On the bottom edge I see what looks like it might be a hinge? Is it? Does the side drop down?
No, I'm a soapmaker not a woodworker, Jim.
lol It was actually made by a fellow soapmaker and woodworker who used to be a moderator here years ago when the forum first started out- SoapmakerMan. I don't know whatever became of him.....he seemed to have dropped off the face of the planet around 7 years ago. Anyway, he had his own online business making soap molds and cutters, and my sis actually was the one who purchased it for me and gave it to me for Christmas in 2006. My first 'real' mold. lol
Clarice said:
I also see little indentations on both of the vertical sides (in the picture orientation). Are they there to help you pop the soap out?
You probably know by now from seeing the pics that the indentations are where the divider for converting the mold into the log mode is inserted.
Clarice said:
It looks like the Mylar is set into the mold, not taped together at the edges - is that right? Is that because since “thickish” not much soap can leak through open joints corners of Mylar?
Yes- that is correct- I don't need to tape the liners at the corners, although I should mention that the pic doesn't actually show how things really look when the mold is prepped to receive batter. On one of the long (10") sides, I place a 1/8"-thick strip of Funky Foam behind the mylar strip there that is the same size as the mylar strip, which is just enough to push the small gaps in the corners closed, if that makes sense. In any case, that little improvisation of mine makes it so that the corners do not leak any more than 1/8 teaspoon of soap, total, if I happen to pour at a thin trace. At med-thick trace, way much less than that to zero soap breaks through at all.
Clarice said:
Finally. How do you get that gorgeous bevel?
With my handy-dandy Kakuri 1/8" to 1/4" radius plane as demonstrated
here.
IrishLass