Hair

Soapmaking Forum

Help Support Soapmaking Forum:

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

sososo

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 17, 2013
Messages
136
Reaction score
40
What if I put some hair in the lye water?! Not human hair - it will be too... canibalistic! Let's say some cat hair, which is very thin. Or some bird feathers. Will it disolve in lye, like silk? If so, will the soap be improved by this ingredient?
 
If you're planning on selling this soap I would be *very* careful to clearly label the ingredients. Different hairs/furs/feathers are not hypoallergenic like silk is. Would be interested to hear how it turns out though!
 
I used the belly fluff fur from my cat on this soap: http://www.soapmakingforum.com/showthread.php?t=43921
It worked as well as tussah silk, but I have to say that I cant really tell the effects and I am too lazy to make the same batch with and without and do a blind study.
The way I see it - the protein is broken up by the lye and theres no danger of any dander sticking about - which is what produces the allergic reaction. Though I doubt I would do it on a soap that I sold.
 
Oh jeez I am allergic to animal hair and probably some of people too, It is scary, I could get the soap made with feather (strong allergy) or cats hair.......
 
It was me that put my daughter's hair in a shampoo bar - I don't know if it made much of a difference, but it dissolved just fine - maybe even better than silk. She is 8 with gorgeous, pristine red hair, and I just pulled it from her hairbrush (pretty sure all of the chemicals in my hair would cause problems!). At first I was worried about the ick factor, but I got over that. I would absolutely do it again. It did smell funky, but I also used beer in the lye water. I've not repeated either yet so can't tell which was the stinker.

I don't sell so no issues there :)
 

Latest posts

Back
Top