Recent content by Hertzyscowicz

Soapmaking Forum

Help Support Soapmaking Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
  1. H

    How to Make Soap - Soapmaking Guide for Beginners

    NaOH is the chemical formula for Sodium Hydroxide, the sort of lye you use to make solid soap. I think NaOh is a typo and it should say NaOH. CO2 is Carbon Dioxide. As for mol, it is the symbol for Mole, the SI unit for amount of substance, defined as around 6*10^23 molecules.
  2. H

    What's the "saponification value" of honey?

    I've made a few batches of soap with honey as an additive (60 grams per kilo of oil). I noticed the soap is a bit slow to set, and the soap residue in my equipment was a bit oilier than usual. So, I got to thinking, honey is acidic so it probably reacts with lye. I tried removing the honey as an...
  3. H

    Is there a way to dry lye grains?

    I decided to experiment with the lye. I have discovered that hot moist lye will corrode the glazing on ceramic containers and will eat through baking paper.
  4. H

    Is there a way to dry lye grains?

    I just opened my supplies cabinet after a week, and realized I had left the lid off my tub of lye. I have had rainy weather so the air moisture is up, too. As a result, it looks as if at least some of my lye has deliquesced, that is to say, absobed enough moisture from the air to dissolve in it...
  5. H

    How to Make Soap - Soapmaking Guide for Beginners

    With water, the CO2 has a better chance of penetrating into the mixture, and new molecules of NaOH will move in as ones near the liquid surface react, so the reaction will happen a lot faster. That is how you end up with soda ash on top of uncovered soap. And, as another comment on the risks of...
  6. H

    How to Make Soap - Soapmaking Guide for Beginners

    Hygroscopic means it absorbs water from the air. However, to get a carbonate you need to get carbon from somewhere, and that is where the CO2 is needed.
  7. H

    How to Make Soap - Soapmaking Guide for Beginners

    I started wondering about lye turning to soda ash. I found a figure 1800 mg/m3 for CO2 concentration of room air. A single molecule of CO2 will react with two NaOH molecules, the molecular weights are 44g/mol for CO2 and 40g/mol for NaOH, so to turn a gram of lye into soda ash would take about...
  8. H

    How to Make Soap - Soapmaking Guide for Beginners

    Maybe you should specify that the temperatures are in degrees Fahrenheit, and include the equivalent in Celsius. I know you can get oils to 120 centigrade, I'm not sure how hot a lye mixture can get.
  9. H

    How to Make Soap - Soapmaking Guide for Beginners

    According to Springer, sodium hydroxide dissolves glass particularly fast, as far as hydroxides go. Then again, water also dissolves silicate glass. I personally wouldn't worry about the trace sodium silicate in the soap. As for keeping the implements separate, sodium hydroxide is a component...
  10. H

    Experimental shaving soap recipe

    Okay, I got the shipment of lye and made the soap. The final recipe was 50g Olive oil 50g Castor oil 50g Coconut butter 50g Rapeseed oil 40g glycerine Lye: 28g NaOH 1 dl water 1 tsp bentonite clay 10 drops lavender EO 5 drops vanilla EO 1 tsp Titanium dioxide (White...
  11. H

    Experimental shaving soap recipe

    Heh, I just noticed I hadn't filled in the "Location" box in my profile. I don't quite want KOH enough to pay for overseas shipping :wink:
  12. H

    Experimental shaving soap recipe

    Well, there's been a major snag. The soap making supplier isn't stocking KOH, and all the pharmacies are out of stock, too. I guess I'm going to have to make a hard bar.
  13. H

    Making Your Own Lye?

    I have had limited success in making a hard tallow soap from wood ash lye. For perspective, the lye you get from a half-gallon of slightly compressed weed ash made about a palm-sized inch-thick puck of harsh soap. If you're going to try it for the sake of doing things from scratch, I...
  14. H

    soaping whole coffee beans

    So far I've just thrown in fresh coffee grounds and accepted it as a given that the soap will come out as brown. On the other hand, I suspect that the soap would suck most of the moisture out of the grounds as long as you don't use them while they're still warm.
  15. H

    Charcoal

    I suppose you could just go to the supermarket and pick up a sack of coals, and either sift out the dust or grind a few bits. I'm not sure if it being active is all that important in use as a soap colorant. I haven't tried it, though.
Back
Top