Ugh, my soap is drying out my skin

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Ok. So I'm new, green new, but I've studied a ton load for a couple months before diving in. I'll do my best to help. So from my experience, 20% co can be drying to some, and definitely can be drying to many at such a low superfat.

But the skin reportedly feels fine, not tight or irritated, which is what I would consider "drying" - so I'm still wondering if we're barking up the right tree.


Superfat it's above and beyond what you leave on your skin in way of un saponified oils. You sap the oils and fat with lye, and excess gets left behind to moisturize.

Picky point maybe, but soap is to clean, and will not moisturise. Oil doesn't moisturise either. Moisture (water) does. Oil prevents evaporation, and provides lubrication. You can either leave the natural oil on the skin with a low cleansing soap, or leave a residue on the skin with a superfat. (or both, I suppose, but for me that feels awful - I know some people love a highly conditioning soap, though.) That's called "conditioning", but not "moisturising".

I think I would still suggest the same things though. Exfoliate to see if the ashiness is just dead skin sloughing off rather than the soap drying you out, try a slightly higher superfat, don't worry too much about the coconut percentage right now, since your skin isn't tight or uncomfortable, and change one thing at a time in your soap (make small batches) until you like what you are producing.

Just my thoughts as we explore the situation! :)
 
Thanks so much!!!


Ok. So I'm new, green new, but I've studied a ton load for a couple months before diving in. I'll do my best to help. So from my experience, 20% co can be drying to some, and definitely can be drying to many at such a low superfat. Second, palm is a hard oil with NOT an awesome conditioning number. It's hard, low on cleansing at a 1 (@ 100% usage), BUT also 49 on conditioning factor (@ 100% usage). My overall conditioning I try to keep at a 58ish total conditioning at the lowest; if using tallow, and if palm/animal fat free appx a 60 plus on conditioning. You are currently at a 56/conditioning and 14 cleansing with avocado butter, and 58/conditioning with 14 cleansing if using avocado oil EDIT, you said avocado but I don't see if it was oil or butter.....end EDIT hehe.(if I did that correctly....my arm brace is on and I'm typing on a screen the size of a gnat :-/ makes it hard to maintain accuracy lol!). I'd raise the conditioning to appx 60 and keep cleansing where you're at now.


finally, I've read pomace olive traces faster than regular... and though the numbers look the same, I can only assume the qualities felt are different. I'd stick to regular ole olive.
:)

So. I'll offer my "green experience" opinion...

Superfat it's above and beyond what you leave on your skin in way of un saponified oils. You sap the oils and fat with lye, and excess gets left behind to moisturize. You're leaving 3%, and the basic recipes for beginners recommend 5%, and finally I've found between 7-9% rocks on silkiness. If using goat milk, try 7% superfat at the least if you're dry, and the goats milk will raise it to almost 8% because of the fats in milk being saponified. Just a suggestion :)

second, yes!!! You can't add anything at trace for superfatting because lye take what lye wants and it continues to do this for at least 24 hrs, and up to 72+ hrs. If you try to superfat at trace, it means nothing for the lye is still active. lick the batter at trace and see if you get zapped :-/ if you do, it's active and is taking what it wants when it wants...lol. (no don't really do that. It'll probably hurt. A lot. Bad.) So superfat by adding into the lye calc, but don't assume the Shea or the xyz butter is what superfatted your batch. It will wind up a combo of things.

Third, I'd offer advice as to lowering the palm some, leaving the co at 18- 20% and upping the superfat to 7-8%. I'd say keep conditioning to 58-62 and cleansing to 12-14 since you're dried out, and adjust within these ranges. I'd keep Shea, maybe try tallow in place of palm (up to 30-40% tallow, or palm to 15-20% tops), and consider adding rice bran oil or sweet almond. Both have a better shelf life than sunflower and are very conditioning. I think my fave oil, so far, is sweet almond. Love it!!

Rambled I fear, so apologies!! Good luck with it!
 
Agree with what's been said about the cure time.
I read some suggested recipes blogs and wonder if these people have ever TRIED their soap - eventually I realised it's probably just my skin. I like a 'cleansing' value of 14 or less (in soapcalc). Usually getting this sort of level means I have low bubbles and hardness (depending on the mix I'm using) so I usually add some sugar for bubbles, and sodium lactate for hardness.
One soap I'm loving more and more is Canolive (... or is it Canolive II... ) from millersoap.
http://www.millersoap.com/soapallveg.html#Canolive

Otherwise, my standard recipe has around 20-22% coconut oil.
 
Agree with what's been said about the cure time.
I read some suggested recipes blogs and wonder if these people have ever TRIED their soap - eventually I realised it's probably just my skin. I like a 'cleansing' value of 14 or less (in soapcalc). Usually getting this sort of level means I have low bubbles and hardness (depending on the mix I'm using) so I usually add some sugar for bubbles, and sodium lactate for hardness.
One soap I'm loving more and more is Canolive (... or is it Canolive II... ) from millersoap.
http://www.millersoap.com/soapallveg.html#Canolive

Otherwise, my standard recipe has around 20-22% coconut oil.
I love the Canolive II it is a great feeling soap. I also keep low cleansing numbers in many soaps and superfat between 2-3 depending on what my coconut oil percentage is. To low a cleansing and a 5% or above just does not feel like it rinses off. I hate washing with oil and my plumbing like the lower superfatting much better.
I have one customer that finds her dark skin becomes ashy with products the contain clay. I just learned that one a few weeks ago
 
But the skin reportedly feels fine, not tight or irritated, which is what I would consider "drying" - so I'm still wondering if we're barking up the right tree.




Picky point maybe, but soap is to clean, and will not moisturise. Oil doesn't moisturise either. Moisture (water) does. Oil prevents evaporation, and provides lubrication. You can either leave the natural oil on the skin with a low cleansing soap, or leave a residue on the skin with a superfat. (or both, I suppose, but for me that feels awful - I know some people love a highly conditioning soap, though.) That's called "conditioning", but not "moisturising".

I meant condition. When not selling a slip of words is easy, what with not needing to label as soap or as cosmetic based on claims or make zero claims and label a soap, and moisturizing I think is a cosmetic claim etc etc etc.

Yes, condition is what I intended last night:)
 
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And I would like to say, some soaps feel drying and I experience an ash like thing several minutes after washing. It doesn't feel tight nor itchy, but does, for all intensive purposes, feel drying. It is to the point I need a little lotion when I experience this. Not itchy or irritated, but drying. But that's just me.
 
interesting points made about how with CP you can't really control what gets superfatted!
In the past I have tried to add my desired superfatting oil at the last possible minute thinking I could fool the lye - but i guess you can't fool the lye!
 
interesting points made about how with CP you can't really control what gets superfatted!
In the past I have tried to add my desired superfatting oil at the last possible minute thinking I could fool the lye - but i guess you can't fool the lye!

it's quite logical, with CP, even if you try to add your SF oil at trace there is still lots of active lye present. there is no way one can dictate the lye to pick and choose which oil it is for SF. different case with HP, after the cook (and after passing the zap test) one can assume that no active lye is present, therefore oils added afterwards can act as SF.
 
And I would like to say, some soaps feel drying and I experience an ash like thing several minutes after washing. It doesn't feel tight nor itchy, but does, for all intensive purposes, feel drying. It is to the point I need a little lotion when I experience this. Not itchy or irritated, but drying. But that's just me.

I would say up the superfat level then. It would act somewhat like a little lotion, ime.
 
My handmade CP soap has been drying out my skin. I realized that I was using too much coconut oil (30%) so I reduced it to 20% but it is still drying out my skin. What oils should I add to address this problem? Should I reduce the coconut oil even more?
I used palm oil at first many years ago, because I fell for the "veggie oils are best" line; then I switched to lard and liked that much better. I also used to use a lot of shea and other butters, but despite the label appeal of butters, those who use my soap much prefer the simpler "regular" soaps. My skin doesn't like butters in soap either, so I've since decided it's much better and more cost effective to use them applied directly to the skin like in whipped butters, etc.

My customers' favorite soap, nen especially, is 30% lard, 30% coconut oil and 40% pomace, at 6% superfat and 30% lye concentration, per SoapCalc: http://soapcalc.net/calc/SoapCalcWP.asp

My women users seem to prefer 30% lard, 20% coconut oil, 30% pomace, and 20% avocado, 7% SF and 30% lye concentration. Replacing just 2-3% of the avocado with jojoba can make a difference too and looks good on the label. I charge a little more for these soaps to cover the more expensive costs.

I've also made 50% coconut and 50% pomace at 15% SF that customers say is quite nice and conditioning, but that recipe is quite fast-tracing so I tend to avoid it; pomace tends to be fast-tracing, anyway. I mention this recipe only because high coconut does not necessarily mean drying.

What IS drying and can really make your skin feel itchy and dry even without soap, is hard water, especially high calcium water... and upping the superfat won't make much if any difference. When I first started making soap years ago, friends and customers raved how my soap felt like lotion was applied after washing. I never could feel that effect myself until I tried my soap in softened water at a friend's house. The difference was quite eye-opening.

Lastly I should point out that if you are washing your hands with different soap 20 times a day to compare recipes, as even I still sometimes do, even the best soap is going to be drying!
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http://www.pinterest.com/pin/create/extension/
 
You also might want to try a recipe with no coconut oil at all. Some people are skin sensitive/allergic to it.

But before that, as has been already mentioned, I'd up the SF to 8% and give it 6 weeks' cure.
 
I have been switching over to lot of brands since years , finally my searching option ends when I started using Verdura skin care soap. A good solution for my sensitive skin, Can anyone suggest the ingredients of that soap , which I can add for my soap making.
 
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