Texture Rollers & Mats

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I am curious about the experience of others with the use of silicone texture/impression mats and/or polymer clay texture rollers in CP soap.

I used a silicone impression mat of waves for the top of my Mount Saint Helens soap, and it worked great. I plan to use it again to make an ocean waves soap by putting the texture mat at the bottom of my slab mold sometime in the next week. I have another silicone texture mat that is typically used to make beeswax candles. I cut it for the bottom of my slab mold and it makes a perfect honeycomb pattern for my beeswax and honey soap.

Now I am on the hunt for a large silicone texture mat of overlapping leaves to use with mint or botanical fragrances. So far, no luck. I found this one on Etsy, but the finished impression isn’t quite what I want because it is too abstract. If I didn’t know they were supposed to be leaves I wouldn’t know that they were leaves.

As an alternative, I am wondering about texture rollers used for polymer clay. They are just wide enough that I could make a pattern to go across the top of my loaf mold, which is 3.25 inches. I’m wondering if I could roll out soap dough, then roll the texture roller over it, and end up with a pattern that a very fussy person would be happy with. This sounds very fussy to me since I would first have to make soap dough, then roll and texture, a thin layer of soap, make sure it is an exact size to fit the top of the soap mold, and hope I don’t mangle it in the process. Has anyone used this type of roller with soap dough?

Another option might be to roll the texture roller over another clay-like material, and then use that in a two-step process to make my own silicone mat that would fit inside a mold. The first pass would give me a negative image in the soap, which I do not want, but I could use it to create a cast for the second silicone pour, and that would create the actual mat to use inside the mold. I’ve done something similar years ago, and might try it as a self-challenge unless someone has a better idea.

Another option is to use a small polymer clay mat, but I would then have to piece multiples together for the soap. I can’t quite imagine how I’d make that work.

Advice, please?
 
I am curious about the experience of others with the use of silicone texture/impression mats and/or polymer clay texture rollers in CP soap.

I used a silicone impression mat of waves for the top of my Mount Saint Helens soap, and it worked great. I plan to use it again to make an ocean waves soap by putting the texture mat at the bottom of my slab mold sometime in the next week. I have another silicone texture mat that is typically used to make beeswax candles. I cut it for the bottom of my slab mold and it makes a perfect honeycomb pattern for my beeswax and honey soap.

Now I am on the hunt for a large silicone texture mat of overlapping leaves to use with mint or botanical fragrances. So far, no luck. I found this one on Etsy, but the finished impression isn’t quite what I want because it is too abstract. If I didn’t know they were supposed to be leaves I wouldn’t know that they were leaves.

As an alternative, I am wondering about texture rollers used for polymer clay. They are just wide enough that I could make a pattern to go across the top of my loaf mold, which is 3.25 inches. I’m wondering if I could roll out soap dough, then roll the texture roller over it, and end up with a pattern that a very fussy person would be happy with. This sounds very fussy to me since I would first have to make soap dough, then roll and texture, a thin layer of soap, make sure it is an exact size to fit the top of the soap mold, and hope I don’t mangle it in the process. Has anyone used this type of roller with soap dough?

Another option might be to roll the texture roller over another clay-like material, and then use that in a two-step process to make my own silicone mat that would fit inside a mold. The first pass would give me a negative image in the soap, which I do not want, but I could use it to create a cast for the second silicone pour, and that would create the actual mat to use inside the mold. I’ve done something similar years ago, and might try it as a self-challenge unless someone has a better idea.

Another option is to use a small polymer clay mat, but I would then have to piece multiples together for the soap. I can’t quite imagine how I’d make that work.

Advice, please?
I have used the rollers to texture my soaps and with the right timing for hardness it worked amazingly well. As far as texture mats go, I just received 4 of them from the states, not sure if allowed to say from where? I'm making an oat and honey soap with one of them that has flowers on one side and honey comb on the other half. Will make next week. For creating your own with leaves I'd do it by making several of the little ones in a mold with plaster you could then laying them back in the mould and pouring your silicon over it. Thought of doing a similar project as I have heaps of the polymer texture sheets from my polymer phase years ago. I also have a lot of stencils that would make beautiful texture mats. I bought 3 series of the same ones to build them up . I was going to try pouring plaster over them in a silicon mould and see how it goes. Might be a very time consuming creating them but awesome having them going forward. I adore textures on cp soaps.
 

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