Papasmurf
Member
I have a friend that has very dry skin. Anyone have a recipe I can try to help him?
As a rookie, you may want to try messing around with a "starter formula" such as the Basic Trinity of Oils to get a feel for what each leg of the trinity brings to the batch. Once made, try adding 5% shea to boost conditioning and 5% castor to boost conditioning & lather.Is there a reason no one is suggesting to add shea butter? What I have read makes it sound it would help. (I am rookie and am only 4 batches into soap making so please pardon my ignorance if this is a bad idea)
It’s actually my son who has the eczema and believe it or not, after using anything and everything, he seals moisture with Vaseline. We used to also use a product called Hydrolatum, but I believe it is no longer made.@Rsapienza My mom gets eczema due to her auto-immune disorder. She likes using my 50/50 Jojoba/Argan Oil blend. What do you like to use as a moisturizer?
May I inquire as to why you are no longer using castor?“…I don't use castor anymore, but I do try to build in a source of sugar, such as beer or aloe.
May I inquire as to why you are no longer using castor?
Castor supposedly is beneficial for dry, irritated skin, too. I always add it to my butters.Castor is just one ingredient among many that increases the water solubility and enhances the lather stability of soap.
I won't argue that adding a small % of castor may cause the soap to lather better than the same soap without castor, but I don't think it always has that effect.
I've made batches with and without castor and couldn't tell any difference between the two. Apparently what I'm doing otherwise is enough so castor doesn't make much difference. But others swear by it. The only way to know is to test and see for yourself.
Castor supposedly is beneficial for dry, irritated skin, too. I always add it to my butters.
Is there a reason no one is suggesting to add shea butter? What I have read makes it sound it would help. (I am rookie and am only 4 batches into soap making so please pardon my ignorance if this is a bad idea)
Thank you! I didn’t know that.Castor in a body butter, salve, lotion, etc. is one thing, but using castor to make soap, as we're discussing here, is another thing entirely.
During saponification, fats are broken apart into fatty acids (mostly ricinoleic acid for castor), and those FAs are converted into soap. The benefits or properties of the original fat/oil do not survive in soap because the fat itself has been largely destroyed.
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