Susie said:*MODS* Can someone chop the portion of this thread out starting with jenny1271's post and move it to a new thread, please? I think it deserves to not be in the middle of this, and it does need to be addressed.
Hi Susie- I do see your point, although I think it might be better if I go into the title of the thread to include something about it at the tail end instead, since most of Jenny's post in this thread has much to do with her opening question, and the tail end of it intertwines intimately throughout it.
Do you think this might be soothing (though I understand not necessarily healing) for someone who has eczema.
Jenny- if I understand your above comment correctly, you understand that soap will not cure/heal eczema, but instead you just want to know if such a soap as what you posted a link to will not cause further irritation to it based on the conditioning and creaminess numbers?
That's a tough one to answer. As Hazel, Carol and Susie pointed out, so much depends on the individual person and what their sensitivities might be. What helps to soothe one might actually irritate another. Definitely inquire as to what the child is allergic/sensitive to before you begin.
If it were me, I would use Susie's recipe as a starting point (if the child is not sensitive to any of the ingredients, that is). Lard makes a wonderfully mild, creamy and conditioning soap. I would go with her recipe instead of the one with the really high cocoa butter because too much cocoa butter has been known to cause brittle, draggy soap. I personally would never use more than 30%, depending on my other oils, but that's just me.
I've actually made a recipe similar to yours, but only I used 65% beef tallow, 23% castor oil, and 12% olive oil instead. It made a really nice animal-based Castile-type of sorts that was nice and hard and velvety-feeling instead of sticky in spite of the high castor, because of the high tallow amount.
As has been said already- please don't get too hooked on the SoapCalc qualities numbers. They are not the 'be-all/end-all'. The best thing you can do is make your soap, cure it, test it out, and then compare the results against the given numbers. Only then will the numbers on SoapCalc be of any help to you. For example- is the finished soap too drying? Then tweak your oil amounts for your next batch to lower the cleansing number and/or increase the conditioning number, etc.... We can theorize about the numbers all day, but until you have that first batch made and cured and have used it, you really won't know how those numbers translate over to your cured soap.
Don't make any large batches at first. Just make a 1 lb. batch to start, cure it and test it out, or make a couple of small 1 lb. batches of different formulas to compare to each other.
IrishLass