Does any one know if it's possible to use Tung oil or China wood oil for soap making?
I normally use this for making natural wood wax/wood polish then started thinking and wondering a bit....
Interesting question - can you find any breakdown of values for tung?
'Chemical characteristics acid value mg KOH/g max. 8 saponification value mg KOH/g 189 - 198 iodine value (Wijs) g I2/100g min. 158 moisture, impurities & volatile matter % max. 0,25 unsaponifiable matter % max. 0,75 gelling time minutes max. 13,5
Fatty acid composition Palmitic acid (C16) % max. 5,5 Oleic acid (C18:1) % max. 4 Linoleic acid (C18:2) % max. 8,5 alpha-Eleostearic acid (C18:3) % min. 82'
https://www.castor-international.nl...printbare-versie-op-briefpapier-sjabloon).pdf
It seems it has the right type of values but silly me doesn't know enough to convert this to usable knowledge for you.
Sounds scary to me! A high percentage of soaping oils are also food oils. The remainder are used in other body products, including lip balms (shea, cocoa, etc.) I would say that since Tung and/or China wood oils are not used in any body products or comestibles, using it for soap would not be safe or healthy.
I would expect residues such as from hexane and other processing steps, in addition to additives unsafe for human skin and biology. The manufacturing standards and legal requirements for non-food and non-human use products are greatly different, as well.
I didn't Google it at all -- this is just from my 44 year journey as a highly critical natural and organic consumer with extremely high standards.
But he oil is from pressing seeds from the nut of the Tung tree (Vernicia fordii) so it's all natural. Further..pure Tung oil is considered safe to use on wooden surfaces that comes in contact with food and/or as a varnish on wooden children's toys.
Maybe it's not used in cosmetics because it tends to hardens upon exposure to air?
I use tung oil (pure) on my floor.
It's classed as an irritant, can cause dermatitis, and people allergic to tree nuts can react to it. I wouldn't use it.
And folks.. all natural doesn't mean safe. Foxglove, strychnine, polio, lead and arsenic are all natural.
You forgot Cobra Venom.It's classed as an irritant, can cause dermatitis, and people allergic to tree nuts can react to it. I wouldn't use it.
And folks.. all natural doesn't mean safe. Foxglove, strychnine, polio, lead and arsenic are all natural.
A couple, but I'm unable to paste them for some reason. It's easy enough to find however... chemicalbook and tungoil.co.uk both turn up, amongst others, when one searches on "tung oil" dermatitis or "tung oil" allergic. It's hazardous to ingest, can cause dermatitis, etc.
And no, the things I'm mentioning are just the straight oil, not including solvents.
That kind of search is something I'd always do when investigating a new raw material or ingredient, at minimum.
I can't click "like" on post #16 so I did it for #17
Good work.
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