bodybym
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2010
- Messages
- 225
- Reaction score
- 12
I was contacted by someone who wanted me to make them custom soaps for their website, and was even willing to provide all the oils. Fine, no problem. I had lots of questions from our email exchanges and just got off the phone with them and did another flurry of email.
I had to say no.
They want custom soaps for their website to sell, with very specific ideas in mind about what they want, colors, scents, layers, and for them to be organic. However, they want scents that you can't get organically (like almond and peach) and want to use powdered ingredients that tend to turn brown in soap (like powdered rose petals and ground lavender) - but they don't want brown soap. They want to be able to have their soaps certified as being organic, but want them to be bright and colorful (Them: "like the ones at Sumbody or Lush") but still organic. I don't work exclusively in organics, however I have played with natural colorants, and I know that it is hard to get the bright purples, blues and greens using only natural ingredients.
When I explained that it was a result of the chemical process from the lye then this happened:
Them - "can't you just leave out the lye".
Me - "No, you need lye to make soap. It is the mixing of lye with oils and/or fats that make soap"
Them - "I've seen people on Etsy and other places that say that their soap doesn't contain lye, so why do you have to use it?"
Me - "They may be using glycerin soap, which they bought the base from a supplier and then used it to create soaps. They didn't use lye to make their soaps, but the supplier had to"
Them - "but they say that their soaps are lye free"
Me - "Properly made soaps have no lye left in them after they cure, but you have to use lye to make soap, otherwise all you have are scented and colored fats and oils"
Them - "Could you try to make soap without the lye and see what happens"
Me - "It's just not possible. You can't make soap without lye or oils. If you leave one of them out then you don't have soap".
Them - "Maybe you don't know how to make soap if you can't make it without lye".
I then politely said that I don't believe that we would be good business partners as we seem to have a different vision of what the product should be, and that I wish them well in finding someone who will help them to make the soap that they want.
Good luck to them.
I had to say no.
They want custom soaps for their website to sell, with very specific ideas in mind about what they want, colors, scents, layers, and for them to be organic. However, they want scents that you can't get organically (like almond and peach) and want to use powdered ingredients that tend to turn brown in soap (like powdered rose petals and ground lavender) - but they don't want brown soap. They want to be able to have their soaps certified as being organic, but want them to be bright and colorful (Them: "like the ones at Sumbody or Lush") but still organic. I don't work exclusively in organics, however I have played with natural colorants, and I know that it is hard to get the bright purples, blues and greens using only natural ingredients.
When I explained that it was a result of the chemical process from the lye then this happened:
Them - "can't you just leave out the lye".
Me - "No, you need lye to make soap. It is the mixing of lye with oils and/or fats that make soap"
Them - "I've seen people on Etsy and other places that say that their soap doesn't contain lye, so why do you have to use it?"
Me - "They may be using glycerin soap, which they bought the base from a supplier and then used it to create soaps. They didn't use lye to make their soaps, but the supplier had to"
Them - "but they say that their soaps are lye free"
Me - "Properly made soaps have no lye left in them after they cure, but you have to use lye to make soap, otherwise all you have are scented and colored fats and oils"
Them - "Could you try to make soap without the lye and see what happens"
Me - "It's just not possible. You can't make soap without lye or oils. If you leave one of them out then you don't have soap".
Them - "Maybe you don't know how to make soap if you can't make it without lye".
I then politely said that I don't believe that we would be good business partners as we seem to have a different vision of what the product should be, and that I wish them well in finding someone who will help them to make the soap that they want.
Good luck to them.