I am wondering. Does the baking soda in the water do anything as far as reducing/eliminating the slime factor or is it just there to create faux sea water?
'Soda ash' refers to that white powder that tends to pop up on the surface of certain soaps. So it's not an extra ingredient you add; it is something that happens to your soap, and it bothers some people enough to try to get rid of it.KiwiMoose - these are gorgeous - may I clarify - soda ash yielded this gorgeous color? I have done some fabric dyeing, and I thought soda ash was used to help dye "latch onto" fiber - I have never heard of using it on its own?
Thank you very much for your time!
It's there to create faux sea water.... or is it just there to create faux sea water?
Olive oil is high in "unsaponifiables" so the purpose of 0% SF is to saponify as much of the oil as possible to reduce the slime factor. Even at that % some of the fatty acids remain. I'm interested to see how this batch comes out, slime-wise.... I had forgotten to set SF to 0 - it was at default 5%. We will see how it comes out!
Thank youIt's there to create faux sea water.
You might just need to wait a little more for it to set — it might not have gelled due to the individual molds and then it can take a long time.100000% FAIL! LOL
Just peeked at the batch from last night - and it is like a creamy liquid. I can stick my finger straight down into each mold
No idea what I did wrong, as I did get a trace in mixing.
I followed the recipe with the following error - forgot to put SF to 0%. I made a 500 gm batch. I found that the lye mixture (with the faux sea water) was an opaque white in color. Should this have been a clue that something was amiss?
I poured into individual molds which i covered and wrapped in old rugs.
This AM? Looks like body butter
Oh well - trying again!
It's an adventure!
See what happens if you wait a little longer.100000% FAIL! LOL
Just peeked at the batch from last night - and it is like a creamy liquid. I can stick my finger straight down into each mold
No idea what I did wrong, as I did get a trace in mixing.
I followed the recipe with the following error - forgot to put SF to 0%. I made a 500 gm batch. I found that the lye mixture (with the faux sea water) was an opaque white in color. Should this have been a clue that something was amiss?
I poured into individual molds which i covered and wrapped in old rugs.
This AM? Looks like body butter
Oh well - trying again!
It's an adventure!
I am going to make another 500 gm batch with 0% SF and see how that goes. Do you recommend boosting the gelling process with the oven if using individual molds?
Thanks!
Thank you Dean! If these buggers got any softer, they would be like water - HAH!
Having said that - I just finished the re-make with 0% SF and being MUCH more careful about the oil to lye temp and it came to trace faster. I also worked it to a harder trace than yesterday - so - - - finger crossed!!!
Any ideas with what to do with the first batch if it just stays mush? Any way to repurpose? Or should I just pitch?
Thanks!
I didn't gel mine. And yes, my lye water was very cloudy.I am going to make another 500 gm batch with 0% SF and see how that goes. Do you recommend boosting the gelling process with the oven if using individual molds?
Thanks!
A castile will not give the expected numbers in Soap Calc. Your numbers are similar to mine with the exception that I DID use CO and castor so a little more in those areas. But the oleic is very high and the cleaning/bubbly very low, yes.OK - i reran the recipe with 0% SF through the soap calculator (attached)
I am concerned about the hardness, cleansing, bubbly?
Counterintuitive - or is this your point Zany - as in - with 1.7 faux sea water : 1 NaOH this works?
Thanks much, C
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