urbaninnovate13
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- Joined
- Jan 24, 2015
- Messages
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Hello everyone!
I have used this site for informational purposes before, but otherwise am new to the site. I have not made soap before but know a bit about it, the closest to making it I have come is dissolving my castile soap bar in distilled water to get liquid soap since pure liquid dr. B soap is very runny and expencive.
I am now ready to try my hand at soaponification, but I'm wondering about oils.
I am starting a garden / green house and would like to use oils I can obtain myself eventually.
I live in zone 5 so I can not grow any hard soap oils, but I would like to make a bar soap.
I know olive oil is a soft soap oil but will become a bar after a long patient cure.
which of these soft soap oils has a harder quality to mix in to speed up the cure to maybe 3 months or 4?
in this area i can try to Obtain:
olive oil
almond oil
chestnut oil
peanut oil
hempseed oil
carrot seed oil
plum kernel oil
These are all that I can think of which produce good oils and I might be blessed to grow hardy variety of. a few of the oils are off the list like sunflower because of the low shelf life.
One more question,
if I were to eventually want to create my own wood ash lye, potassium hydroxide, how would this effect the soap
I have heard that this type of lye makes only soft soaps, so will that make for more cure time?
i have only used one "potash" soap which was made from castor oil and coconut oil, nd that was a pretty sturdy bar, but they did use coconut which is a hard soap oil to thicken it.
Also, i hope to some time have a bee box or many to help pollinate my plants and obtain beeswax from, so maybe I can include that in the recipe to stiffen things up.
I have used this site for informational purposes before, but otherwise am new to the site. I have not made soap before but know a bit about it, the closest to making it I have come is dissolving my castile soap bar in distilled water to get liquid soap since pure liquid dr. B soap is very runny and expencive.
I am now ready to try my hand at soaponification, but I'm wondering about oils.
I am starting a garden / green house and would like to use oils I can obtain myself eventually.
I live in zone 5 so I can not grow any hard soap oils, but I would like to make a bar soap.
I know olive oil is a soft soap oil but will become a bar after a long patient cure.
which of these soft soap oils has a harder quality to mix in to speed up the cure to maybe 3 months or 4?
in this area i can try to Obtain:
olive oil
almond oil
chestnut oil
peanut oil
hempseed oil
carrot seed oil
plum kernel oil
These are all that I can think of which produce good oils and I might be blessed to grow hardy variety of. a few of the oils are off the list like sunflower because of the low shelf life.
One more question,
if I were to eventually want to create my own wood ash lye, potassium hydroxide, how would this effect the soap
I have heard that this type of lye makes only soft soaps, so will that make for more cure time?
i have only used one "potash" soap which was made from castor oil and coconut oil, nd that was a pretty sturdy bar, but they did use coconut which is a hard soap oil to thicken it.
Also, i hope to some time have a bee box or many to help pollinate my plants and obtain beeswax from, so maybe I can include that in the recipe to stiffen things up.