I'm no soap chemistry expert, but I think I have a bit of a clue from quite a bit of reading on the matter as well as from simply documenting the changes that my soap goes through over time.
I really don't see why people, regardless of their academic background, refuse to accept that soap is not at its 100% best in only a week or whatever. All a person has to do is just try a long-term experiment and keep an open mind about the results.
The results aren't massaged into a number like the SoapCalc "numbers" -- at least I haven't heard any handcrafted soapers giving ratings for lather, longevity, mildness, etc. In the commercial soap making world, a battery of tests are used to evaluate irritancy, mushing, cracking, lather volume, bar texture, etc., but their results can't be boiled down to just a number or two either.
Ahem. Well. Stepping off my soap box ...
Yes the increase in mildness and increase in lather is in part due to long-term physical changes in the structure of a bar soap. Commercial soap makers can force these changes by extruding, mixing, or milling the soap. Since we handcrafted soapers don't have access to the machinery that accomplishes these processes, we can use time instead to our advantage.
I really don't see why people, regardless of their academic background, refuse to accept that soap is not at its 100% best in only a week or whatever. All a person has to do is just try a long-term experiment and keep an open mind about the results.
The results aren't massaged into a number like the SoapCalc "numbers" -- at least I haven't heard any handcrafted soapers giving ratings for lather, longevity, mildness, etc. In the commercial soap making world, a battery of tests are used to evaluate irritancy, mushing, cracking, lather volume, bar texture, etc., but their results can't be boiled down to just a number or two either.
Ahem. Well. Stepping off my soap box ...
Yes the increase in mildness and increase in lather is in part due to long-term physical changes in the structure of a bar soap. Commercial soap makers can force these changes by extruding, mixing, or milling the soap. Since we handcrafted soapers don't have access to the machinery that accomplishes these processes, we can use time instead to our advantage.
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