Search results

Soapmaking Forum

Help Support Soapmaking Forum:

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

    Question - in a bind! Weight or volume?

    I knocked out a batch myself. Not for any public use at all. I guessed on a couple things, like preservative. (Math is not my forte, and I was fairly annoyed.) Didn't congeal, nothing went wrong, used myself and brother for guinea pigs for a quick spot test...dunno about any claim as to...
  2. P

    Question - in a bind! Weight or volume?

    Assuming things are mostly standardized due to basic chemistry - is preservative (liquapar! yaaaay!) measured by weight or by percentage of overall volume? And if y'all think I am trolling - I am trying to watching the Nascar Nationwide race and figure out how to move cross-country. Eh.
  3. P

    Question - in a bind! Weight or volume?

    Sorry, gotta make you revisit why you bother and whether ammo is cheap enough - Got all the ordered stuff. Along with bases, coconut type crap, etc, etc - want a what not to do list, here is where to ask - still a nightly thing. Rest can support actual research.
  4. P

    Question - in a bind! Weight or volume?

    Will do so. Holy expletives - thanks!
  5. P

    Question - in a bind! Weight or volume?

    Assuming it is arguably the most retarded formula ever - if you've a better 'beginner' formula - we are game. Just trying to knock out a very, very initial 12 oz bottle of simple, fragranced thing for the sister - proof of concept. Yeah, it's a crappy, proprietary, mostly unworkable...
  6. P

    Question - in a bind! Weight or volume?

    https://therapygarden.com/index.php?mai ... asy_lotion Has us confuzled.
  7. P

    Question - in a bind! Weight or volume?

    Have a somewhat vague recipe from Therapy Garden for lotion making. Have all the materials, have a reasonably calibrated scale; but the 'recipe' does not specify whether to use ounces by weight or ounces by fluid volume of finished product for the Liquapar preservative. Someone please...
Back
Top