I made these soaps back in May for a family that has 16 alums of the same ”green & gold“ university. The striped green and gold one is scented with BB Tobacco & Bay Leaf in the green stripes only to avoid any possible discoloration in the gold. The one with the heart embed is scented with a blend of BB White Ginger & Amber and OT Peche de Vigne (I was near the end of the bottle). The swirled soap is scented with BeScented’s Love Spell. The family has strong ties to the Chesapeake Bay in Virginia, which is why I added the blue to the swirled soap. It’s not my best swirl ever, but I wanted to include it to show that soy wax soap can be swirled.
First, I have to give a tip of the hat to @KiwiMoose and @earlene for getting me interested in soy wax in the first place. I like working with it and have decided to stick with it for an animal fat free soap moving ahead, in lieu of palm which will continue to get the best of me for reasons I will never understand. This particular soy wax recipe is not an inexpensive recipe to make, and I don’t use it for testing colors, fragrances or designs, but I really like the soap. I make it for myself and special people . It has good doses of cocoa butter and shea to create the longevity and fatty acid profiles I like. The oil percentages are: 30% OO, 20% CO, 20% GW 415*, 15% cocoa butter, 10% shea, 5% castor, which yields lauric (10), myristic (4), palmitic (13), stearic (17), ricinoleic (5), oleic (44), linoleic (5), linolenic (0). SF is nominally 2-3%, but I sometimes use extra oil to mix colorants. I add ROE to my liquid oils, and in the recipe use sugar at 2% TOW, sodium citrate at 1.5% TOW, 40% lye concentration and work in the 110-120 F temp range. It works well for multi-color swirls as long as I exercise reasonable stick blender restraint and use friendly FOs. I’ve been using 40% lye concentration for some time now and rarely have any issues with acceleration, but maybe that’s because I stay away from troublesome FOs. For a more cost-effective, but lower longevity (S+P) soy wax soap, I up the GW415 to 23-25%, drop the cocoa butter down and use oils like rice bran and avocado that contribute some stearic and/or palmitic. *For reasons that are too complicated to explain in this thread, I created a custom profile for GW 415 in the SMF c@lculator. @earlene posted it, here.
First, I have to give a tip of the hat to @KiwiMoose and @earlene for getting me interested in soy wax in the first place. I like working with it and have decided to stick with it for an animal fat free soap moving ahead, in lieu of palm which will continue to get the best of me for reasons I will never understand. This particular soy wax recipe is not an inexpensive recipe to make, and I don’t use it for testing colors, fragrances or designs, but I really like the soap. I make it for myself and special people . It has good doses of cocoa butter and shea to create the longevity and fatty acid profiles I like. The oil percentages are: 30% OO, 20% CO, 20% GW 415*, 15% cocoa butter, 10% shea, 5% castor, which yields lauric (10), myristic (4), palmitic (13), stearic (17), ricinoleic (5), oleic (44), linoleic (5), linolenic (0). SF is nominally 2-3%, but I sometimes use extra oil to mix colorants. I add ROE to my liquid oils, and in the recipe use sugar at 2% TOW, sodium citrate at 1.5% TOW, 40% lye concentration and work in the 110-120 F temp range. It works well for multi-color swirls as long as I exercise reasonable stick blender restraint and use friendly FOs. I’ve been using 40% lye concentration for some time now and rarely have any issues with acceleration, but maybe that’s because I stay away from troublesome FOs. For a more cost-effective, but lower longevity (S+P) soy wax soap, I up the GW415 to 23-25%, drop the cocoa butter down and use oils like rice bran and avocado that contribute some stearic and/or palmitic. *For reasons that are too complicated to explain in this thread, I created a custom profile for GW 415 in the SMF c@lculator. @earlene posted it, here.
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