Vanilla FO Updates:
1. The RE (Rustic Escentuals) "French Vanilla & Oak" on Day 6 -- nice scent, but not my favorite, and not super strong.
2. The SC (SweetCakes) "Tahitian Vanilla" on Day 4 -- great scent, a little stronger than yesterday, but still not as strong as i would like it to be.
3. The CS (CandleScience) "Very Vanilla" on Day 3 -- very, very light scent reminiscent of the strong OOB aroma. This is not a great aroma (to me) -- it smells like dirt with a hint of cocoa powder. So far, this wins for darkest bar.
4. The CC "Vanilla Bean Noel" on Day 2 -- the scent has returned! It is nice, but not super strong like I would like it to be. It's still early, though. It already has a rich, DARK, chocolate brown color which I think looks great! This is the 2nd darkest bar.
5. Yesterday, I made a test batch using CC "Oatmeal & Honey." (Yes, I realize this goes against my not wanting to use an FO that smells like food, but it is sooooo strong OOB, that I wanted to see what happens.) OOB, it has an INTENSE aroma of baked goods, like pecan sticky buns -- it smells ABSOLUTELY DELICIOUS! Immediately after cutting last night, this batch has the strongest scent of all vanilla FOs so far, although it has morphed into more of a sugar cookie aroma -- it has an awesome cold "throw," as candlemakers would say. It also has the lightest color, so far. I may end up using this in a vanilla blend to bump up the intesity of the final scent.
6. I made a test batch using CC "Vanilla Musk" last night. I apologize to jblaney, but I was too impatient to wait for the oil mixture and lye mixture to cool down to room temp before combining -- I mixed them at around 95 degrees. I also wanted to judge for myself just how fast it accelerated. It DID accelerate! The scent is great, but again, not as strong as I would like it to be. The next time I use this FO, here's what I would do to try to slow things down:
a. Cool everything down to room temperature (70-75 degrees) before combining.
b. Add a bit more water or liquid.
c. Add at least 5% Hazelnut Oil to my oils mixture. (Hazelnut Oil tends to slow things down a bit -- good when using clove/cinnamon eos, or jojoba oil. Hazelnut oil is also great for using in soap for acne.)
d. Reserve about 1 cup of oil mixture (before adding lye mixture) and add FO to it -- then, add this back into the soap mixture at light trace.
I do realize that I'm a bit strange in that I like my soap to be highly fragrant, so just because I say I don't feel an FO is strong enough, doesn't mean that a "normal" person wouldn't find it strong enough.
One thing I've noticed about ALL of these FOs -- and I'm assuming may be true of all vanilla FOs -- is that the vanilla component of the fragrance disappears during saponification, leaving the remaining fragrance components to come through in the end. With all of the FOs mentioned above, the vanilla aroma in the soap is gone -- which is a real disappointment. If you have a vanilla FO that you really like, do you actually smell vanilla in your soap, or do you smell other elements of the fragrance oil -- be honest.
Jim