JuLeeRenee
Well-Known Member
I made an elephant embeds mold today.
These are the soaps I made recently to estimate the strength of the botanical colorant infusions I started in March.
I'm not alone I expect my new indigo shipment (fabric dyeing grade) to be delivered tomorrow. And just after I'll have finished the (roughly) 28.100 things that are more important, I'll dig deeper into these indigo mysteries.Why oh why does indigo have to go grey on the outer edges?
Do so! Best into the April challenge thread that has gained some traction lately.I finally tried the lollipop swirl. I may or may not post pictures once I cut it,
For the plant indigo, the color change doesn’t seem to be due to exposure to air. It happens on the exposed surface as well as inside the mold. A temperature gradient? I thought about burying the molds in a box of rice, or setting them in a shallow pan of water (like egg custards) while they gel. If you can solve the puzzle, I will buy you a beer the next time I’m in Germany!I'm not alone I expect my new indigo shipment (fabric dyeing grade) to be delivered tomorrow. And just after I'll have finished the (roughly) 28.100 things that are more important, I'll dig deeper into these indigo mysteries.
@KimW I'm intrigued because I love those scents but haven't combined them. Um, for those of us who have not had the experience of 'I can't believe I'm functioning at this hour" (actually I feel that often!) early morning walk past the flower wall garden at Ronald Regan Int'l Airport, can you compare it to something or describe it more?I did a variation of an OPW, "opposing swirls" is my old made-up name, to test an EO blend that occurred to me. 50% Lemongrass, 45% Bergamot and 5% Pine Fir Needle. Sometimes things my brain spits out actually work. Smells like an "I can't believe I'm functioning at this hour" early morning walk past the flower wall garden at Ronald Reagan Int'l Airport, and I can't wait to wash my soapy rags tomorrow!
Zing you are a soapy friend indeed and you are right. It is "Balsam Fir Needle" EO. Thank you, sir. I guess I was a wee bit excited.@KimW I'm intrigued because I love those scents but haven't combined them. Um, for those of us who have not had the experience of 'I can't believe I'm functioning at this hour" (actually I feel that often!) early morning walk past the flower wall garden at Ronald Regan Int'l Airport, can you compare it to something or describe it more?
Also are you sure it's "Pine Fir Needle" -- not just Pine or just Fir Needle?
LMAO! Now I'm skerred about you in Houston! Be careful out there, soapy friend!! Thanks for clarifying the fir needle EO. I have pine but used it only once because it's too pinesol-y. I much prefer fir needle. I love love love your description of this wall -- it may be worth a special trip. And this blend is on my bucket list.Zing you are a soapy friend indeed and you are right. It is "Balsam Fir Needle" EO. Thank you, sir. I guess I was a wee bit excited.
I could find only one picture of part of the flower wall garden, and it's obviously at the end of the season, because none of the flowers are in bloom. It's along a path between two parking garages and part of it is along the old Abingdon Plantation site.
Imagine this wall packed with of every type of flower you've ever seen or heard of in full bloom and at the height of their fragrance, before the day's heat and still wet with dew. You can even touch them and put your face full in them. There's mostly roses of every imaginable color and variety, but there are plenty of other fragrant perennials with some fragrant annuals stuffed in for good measure. Quite a lovely calming before an upcoming business flight to yet another project that will see you working so late you pass all the ladies lining up at the bail-bondsmen, and then realize you're going the wrong way down a one-way in downtown Houston only because you finally notice the traffic lights are facing the wrong way. Good times.
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This is stunning and I cannot wait for the cut!!!!!!!!!!! This has long been on my bucket list and I'm pushing it up.Today I realised I was almost at the end of my masterbatched oils, so I decided to use it all up in a special project.
Ever since I saw Whitney from Cheeky Goat soaps making woodgrain soap, I've been a little bit obsessed with it.
So today was the day.
I did it slightly differently because I'm not confident in my FO discolouring as much as needed, so I added some gold and copper micas to the batter to make it brown, and then also used them both as mica in oil drizzles for extra contrast.
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FO is a 50/50 mix of "mahogany teakwood" and "dragon heart".
I looped the video over and over as I did the pour and followed along as closely as I could, including the panic when it started thickening up
At least during the process it was looking pretty good, dying to cut it now and see!
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Yeah, I feel ya' on that.I didn’t have a snap of the pot before pouring.
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Just beautiful! Is that two different shades of blue in there?Cut last nights soap...drop swirl with my dreaded favorite color. It always locks up on me lol. I beat it this time by not adding fragrance to it, just the other two colors. Scented with Abalone and Sea. My friend named it, without even knowing the fragrance. So this is Ocean Breeze.
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“a little bit”, yes, hmm . Admit it, you were at the butcher's again… Cutting cuboid pieces of meat out of your victims like a crazy serial killer [ETA context]. That chocolate HP soap didn't turn out well either.(although they also remind me a little bit of bacon...)
I very much hope so! From my previous testing I'm expecting a brown/orange shade, but I don't think it will get anywhere close to as dark as the one from the video, hence the pre-emptive top-up.Do you expect the FOs to darken another bit, so that it looks more brown than pink, more like carpentry than slaughterhouse?
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