Hmm, yes, the lye and the heating + the long time should eat a lot of scent. I have heard about the trick with clay as a fixative. But I don't really believe that either. I guess it depends on if the small clay particles itself are porous or not. But clay is nothing else than fine powdered rock. And rock can not hold anything unless it is porous, so that scents will soak into it. I think clay particles are not porous, since they are so small and fine. But I don't know.
Yes, soap making is expensive, and that is fine if you have the money. I don't at the moment. So that's why I have to try to find ways to cut costs. Otherwise I must quit thinking about making soap, and that is definately not an option. And the most expensive is essential oils, since you have to use more than for other applications. Fragrance oils are less expensive. But I don't want to use that. I have two goals for now: The local christmas market and an old style (19th century) market in autumn. And the most expensive is essential oils, since you have to use more than for other applications. Fragrance oils are less expensive. But I don't want to use that in general. But I will buy synthetic sandalwood. If I shall be able to reach christmas market, I have to start up in a while, since olive oil soaps needs such a long curing time. Then there will be failed batches, maybe lye heavy soaps, DOS and maybe this and maybe that that has to be accounted for. So I will need plenty of time.
I have heard that scents will hold up better in hot processed soap. Especially citrus scents. But I don't want to make hot process (I will mess it up completely, boiling over etc), except for a baby soap, where I wish to add an acid to get the ph down. And that is only possible in hot process, I think. I want to make a baby soap that will not hurt as much in the eyes as regular cold process soap. That for sure has to be tested with my own eyes first. For the baby soap I don't want to use neither essential oils or fragrance oils. Essential oils can be adulterated with God knows what. Fragrance oils contain chemicals. And I don't want unknown substances and chemicals for babies. But some sort of scent must be there. So I guess I will use some food item that is safe but still has a mild scent. Maybe tea or something.
This pasta machine thing, I don't think I get it. Or maybe. Are you supposed to knead the soap dough after it has gelled, but still is not ready to unmold? It will maybe be a good idea, but impossible to make any designs. Maybe bang different coloured dough together or something.
One cheap solution is to invest in a destillation apparatus. They can be found quite cheap. And make your own essential oils. Not very practical and cheap if you live in the middle of a big city like New York or something. But on the countryside, there is plenty of plants that can be distilled and are safe to use. Here, we have pine, spruce and birch in abundace. And in the summer, everything is tranformet into a sort of arctic jungle. In this area, we have the highest concentration in the world of ostrich fern (Matteuccia struthiopteris). I have never seen an essential oil of that plant. So that is something I want to make. This plant has a very green scent. Watery green, or damp green.
I was thinking that because of the high melting point of stearic acid, that it maybe would hold scents if the stearic acid is used unmelted in the soap. But then the stearic acid has to be scented before it is added to the soap. And since scents will be soaked up by all sorts of fat, the stearic acid will be scented if it is mixed with essential oils or fragrance oils beforehand, let to sit for quite a while, and then mixed in with the soap, raw, not melted first. The essential oil or fragrance oil itself will not soak in to other fats physically. But it is like a chopped clove of garlic in the same box as a piece of chocolate. The chocolate will get a strong flavour of garlic, but the garlic itself will not physically migrate into the chocolate, if you understand. Like a maceration, where they put fresh flowers on top of animal fat, and the fat sucks up the scent but not the flower itself. But in soap, the lye can maybe suck out the scent again, and heat as well can do the same. So it might not work at all in real life. Plus it will be pieces of unmelted stearic acid in the soap.
But there must be a way to bind scents before they go into the soap, so that they are more protected from lye and heat. I am sure there is, but what? I think it is not only important to try to find something because of the cost, but also in a sort of eco perspective. It takes a lot of plant matter to produce essential oils, and it would be a good thing if something could be done to reduce the consume of essential oils. Some of them have a limited resource as well, like sandalwood from India.
For example. To use 100 ml essential oil in a soap mixture, that will be aproximately the same as to make 10 bottles of perfume (50ml bottle, 20% perfume, 80% perfumers alcohol). So it is a lot that goes into soap.
One thing that I personally will try, since I love sandalwood, is to mix essential oil with mineral oil, and then let it soak into white sandalwood powder. And then mix the scented powder into soap. It might anchor scent, might not, but I hope it will bring a nice sandalwood smell to the essential oil blend.