Go to recipe

Soapmaking Forum

Help Support Soapmaking Forum:

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

PARTSBILL

Active Member
Joined
Feb 24, 2021
Messages
25
Reaction score
62
Location
New Bern NC
Yesterday during several lulls at work I was putting in numbers in the calculator.

Currently I'm limited to my oils:
Olive
Coconut 76
Lard
Castor
Tallow(soon sometimes this week)
Shea butter(the only thing that saved my cracked heels)
Avocado

I think I really may try this one next. I like the way it looks on paper:
Olive 50
Coconut 35
Castor 10
Shea butter 5


500g total
super fat 5%
lye 27.416%
water 2.6
fragrance 15.5

Any problems with this that the soap calc won't jump up and tell me??
 
With 50% OO, it may need a bit longer time to cure. Try it at 6 weeks and if it feels slimy let it cure a bit longer - I would check every 2 weeks until it stops feeling slimy.
35% CO may be drying if you have skin issues. I have found that some soaps with more than 30% will cure to be a nice soap for my dry skin, but it takes a long time to get there (at least 6 months from the time that I bought the soap, I always ask the maker when I buy).
10% Castor really isn't needed and doesn't achieve much other than a sticky feeling soap. I think of castor as an enhancer to the other oils, and keep it in the 4-7% range.
5% shea butter really isn't going to add much to your soap by feel. I would take some out of the CO and castor and replace with the shea - such as bumping up shea to 15% and dropping castor to 5, and CO to 30 - I think the higher shea may cut through some of the drying affect of the CO.

This is just my opinion based on how I formulate for my dry skin. If you don't have to worry about that skin issue, then my only concerns would be curing out the sliminess of a higher OO and the stickiness of 10% castor. You could even change up those two, dropping your OO down to 40 and castor to 5 and adding those to the shea. Or just try the recipe and see how it goes! I tried many variations before I found a recipe I was happy with. Keep your batches small and take notes because as soap ages it does change, sometimes a soap recipe I didn't like at 6 weeks was a great soap at 3 months.
 
You can make a really nice bar of soap with your ingredients. I made soap with 40% Lard, 20% CO, 10% Shea, 5% castor and 25% either olive or avocado or even a split. I don’t use more than 25-30% Olive if I use it as I’m not a fan of high olive oil soaps.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top