Documenting my progress

Soapmaking Forum

Help Support Soapmaking Forum:

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

Tara_H

Mad scientist
Joined
Jun 11, 2019
Messages
1,237
Reaction score
3,758
Location
Ireland
Usually I take crappy random pictures with my phone but I was all inspired by @Mobjack Bay's backdrop thread to get the camera out and take some proper photos.

Not so artistic, I'm afraid! But a documentary-style warts-and-all picture of each soap so I can look back on my soaping journey 😄

First, this is my studio setup 😆
IMG_20210327_123459.jpg
 
Trying out alkanet for colouring. (Also trying out a different way of adding the picture, hope it doesn't do something mental!)

full


This marks the point where I got my hands on some micas! I tried my hand at a Taiwan swirl and failed spectacularly.
full


I was so disappointed with that one that I made another batch the same day and tried a drop swirl, I was much happier with this!
full


The remains and scrapings from those two batches got pressed in my bar press.
full
 
Last edited:
Inspired by

these trees are scented with a blend I call 'forest walk'. They were my first CPOP soap and I definitely overcooked them! There's a lot of tiny bubbles throughout which blur the design.
full


This was a slab poured spin swirl, and the start of my woes with batter being cold and lumpy... I despaired of this one at the time but it's grown on me a lot since. Colours inspired by dead sea landscapes, scented with a blend I call 'spice market'
full
 
Last edited:
Loving this. Gives me encouragement that I can make a simple photo box that works.
I'd say you nailed that tree design, btw!
It was a very high-tech setup as you can see! 🤣 The miracle of cardboard and hot glue...

ummmm - "Bar Press"? What is this magical tool of which you speak?
It's technically meant for food, I got two of these when I was trying to eat more healthy, to make granola bars and things like that...

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B06XB77CSH?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
 
Next phase of soaps I started getting braver and formulating recipes from scratch using the calculator.

This one was made to be an extra luxurious bath soap for my mum, using Shea butter and cocoa butter. It's another attempt at a circling Taiwan swirl, still not quite correct but getting a lot closer!
full


And for myself a low cleansing gardener's soap for the days when I have to wash my hands about a million times. Includes a top layer of dried, used coffee grounds, for scrubbing.
full


I also discovered soap dough, and started getting interested in the Dutch pour challenge which was kicking off.
full
 
Last edited:
I made four versions of the Dutch pour soap, but I had a lot of trouble with it because the high tallow recipe that I use tends to set up very suddenly when it gets too cool, and it's plenty chilly around here. Two batches are still being worked on, but these are the ones that are 'finished'.

This has semi-transparent jellyfish made from very thinly rolled soap dough, and the pour was a transparent layer over the base, with mica in oil drizzled on and then blown with a straw.
full


This one was part of a monster batch, one foot on each side. It's the closest I got to executing an actual vision using this technique.
full


After all that messing around, and having got a real silicone mould for the first time, I made a batch of Zany's no slime Castile by way of a palate cleanser!
full

I used turmeric directly in the batter for the colouring, which I'm now slightly regretting since the small orange dots make me think of DOS...
 
The reason for wanting to make transparent soap in the first place:
full


And then while still in a crystalline humour I made these from the leftovers of that project and the soap dough pebbles.
full


Continuing the soap dough theme, I tried applying some polymer clay techniques and was happy with the results.
full
full
 
The reason for wanting to make transparent soap in the first place:
And then while still in a crystalline humour I made these from the leftovers of that project and the soap dough pebbles.
Continuing the soap dough theme, I tried applying some polymer clay techniques and was happy with the results.

YES!
animal200.gif
 
And then while still in a crystalline humour I made these from the leftovers of that project and the soap dough pebbles.
full
Somebody posted one of these yesterday(?), I think it was you, and it send me down a major youtube rabbit trail! But I can't find anything similar. What's the basic process behind making these? I'm so curious!
 
Somebody posted one of these yesterday(?), I think it was you, and it send me down a major youtube rabbit trail! But I can't find anything similar. What's the basic process behind making these? I'm so curious!
Well, it started out by trying to use up leftovers! I had a bunch of chopped up transparent soap from the purple crystals, and grey soap dough from the pebbles, and it struck me that they could be combined into a geode.

I got a bunch of reference pictures together and dug in. Basically I made rectangles of all the different layers I wanted, stacked them on top of each other, spread over the chopped up crystal bits, and rolled the whole thing into a sausage. When it was set enough I sliced it up. Then later on I added the rough edging; it's old soap dough in a few shades of grey chopped up in the food processor and stuck on by the handful.

The second ones I made were a lot better, rather than stacking all the layers at once, I wrapped them one at a time. This gave a lot more control and I didn't have all the joins in the same place. I also spritzed with alcohol in between to help them adhere. When the whole thing was done I squished it gently up and down the length, which helped the layers to stick, made the whole thing thinner and longer, and gave an interesting unevenness.
 
Well, it started out by trying to use up leftovers! I had a bunch of chopped up transparent soap from the purple crystals, and grey soap dough from the pebbles, and it struck me that they could be combined into a geode.

I got a bunch of reference pictures together and dug in. Basically I made rectangles of all the different layers I wanted, stacked them on top of each other, spread over the chopped up crystal bits, and rolled the whole thing into a sausage. When it was set enough I sliced it up. Then later on I added the rough edging; it's old soap dough in a few shades of grey chopped up in the food processor and stuck on by the handful.

The second ones I made were a lot better, rather than stacking all the layers at once, I wrapped them one at a time. This gave a lot more control and I didn't have all the joins in the same place. I also spritzed with alcohol in between to help them adhere. When the whole thing was done I squished it gently up and down the length, which helped the layers to stick, made the whole thing thinner and longer, and gave an interesting unevenness.
Thank you so much for such a thorough reply, this is great info!!
 
I had a week off work around Paddy's Day, and it was a soap extravaganza!

First there was this pull through that wasn't:
full

I had high hopes for it, but the batter was freezing up in the straws I was using to pour through from the squeezy bottles, so the whole thing was a nightmare in the end. Lovely fruity smell though.

Then I got a delivery of a bunch of new stuff so I tried the pull through again. This one also was not successful but smells great. Scented with plum and rhubarb from Bomar.
full


For Paddy's Day itself I made this green Kryptonite soap by request.
full

It went through a couple of iterations before reaching its final form, but I think it does justice to the reference material:
kryptonite1.jpg
 
Last edited:
The pull through that wasn't might be sad on the outside, but it's happy on the inside! 😁

Still can't get over that green crystal soap, lady. That might be a soap I'd really have to talk myself into using!
 
The pull through that wasn't might be sad on the outside, but it's happy on the inside! 😁

Still can't get over that green crystal soap, lady. That might be a soap I'd really have to talk myself into using!
If it's any consolation, the crystal parts are not at all sharp, in fact it was a lot of effort to try and make them look intimidating since they had a tendency to get rounded edges and go bendy if I wasn't careful! 😆
 
Last edited:

Latest posts

Back
Top