@Alfa_Lazcares If you get an otherwise plain soap with the scratchy bits, could you add a picture to your thread?
(I had a bit of trouble distinguishing which was the soap confetti and which were the scratchy bits in the soap bar, although your photo of them in your hand made it very clear what they look like outside of the soap
).
DeeAnna's suggestion to run some simple tests to try and work out what material the scratchy solids are made of might be enough to finish working out how they are occurring.
Looking at the shape of yours, Alfa, I would think they are some sore of salt that has re-crystallized, and knowing whether they melt [they shouldn't] and whether they dissolve [they should, if the theory of them being salt is correct] - knowing what the tests results are can mean that the focus can be put in the right area (or, if my example of them being salt proves to be wrong, then shifted to another area for exploration)
They hard things are hard to see. They feel like hard balls. I am going to blame the beeswax.
When I cut them off I can squeeze them and they go away. Īwhen you lather up with a bar it feels like I intentionally put an abrasive in it.
I would agree that they look like beeswax, but beeswax isn't usually scratchy - as beeswax isn't soluable, but stearic soap is, that could be tested easily by trying to dissolve in water (if they dissolve, it's not beeswax). If they do dissolve, then the melt test (in your hand) would work, because fat melts at the lower temperature, but beeswax would need a higher temperature to melt it.