John Harris
Well-Known Member
Practically all of my soap making history has involved slab molds. I needed to cut down to more manageable amounts of soap bars. So, in these last days, I have been using a silicone 9 cavity mold. I've used it twice. The first time was for my volcano soap (I'm going to let the bars dry, but it doesn't look very promising). The second time was a couple days ago. The pour looked rich, smooth and luxurious (I poured at moderate to thick trace). They looked great in the mold, but then I unmolded them. The thick batter had not filled in the corners. The bars would have made great soap, but the bars are ugly. Fortunately, there are only 9 of them.
Lesson learned, pour earlier in the trace. (Funny though, with my slab molds, I had always poured with a thickish trace and never had any problems.)
I'm thinking of adapting a slab mold to make smaller batches. Using my huge soap knife as a movable 4th wall, I could make my choice of how many bars I would like to make: 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, etc. (I probably should attach a picture to have this make sense.)
Lesson learned, pour earlier in the trace. (Funny though, with my slab molds, I had always poured with a thickish trace and never had any problems.)
I'm thinking of adapting a slab mold to make smaller batches. Using my huge soap knife as a movable 4th wall, I could make my choice of how many bars I would like to make: 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, etc. (I probably should attach a picture to have this make sense.)