I'm curious too. I know Haida is a style of tribal art, but ive never heard it in relation to soap, and I'm curious what the original inspiration art was[/QUOTE
Haida are a native peoples along the northwest coastline of British Columbia / southeastern Alaska. You'll recognize their art, traditionally manifested in totems. There were/are other tribes too that use the same style (for example Tlingit of SE AK), and I accidentally spoke more narrowly than I should have. But as Gigi said, there's a style there; one I adore. I do believe there's a way to soap it, and a swirling skewer would help, but I did not devote sufficient time to find it. Shame on me; it deserves a soapy medium.
The pics below are two very functional pieces of Haida/Tlingik art that I possess. The salmon is a dish towel, and the multi-creature collage is the hand bag I take to work every day with my lunch, homework, etc. If you look closely you will see life everywhere in the tote -- which is part of why I am inspired by this particular form of art. Soap swirls are probably too random to do this justice, but I do believe with thought, trial, and a lot of of luck, I could honor it in some recognizable way. Challenge or not, I'll keep trying over the years and post when I am close enough to show respect. Maybe when I'm old and gray!