I cut my first successful batch of cold process soap. I've made some great HP, but CP always seems to go wrong for me. It came out beautiful this time! Here's a pic- it's Fig and Honey.View attachment 59141
Very pretty... looks like marble!
I cut my first successful batch of cold process soap. I've made some great HP, but CP always seems to go wrong for me. It came out beautiful this time! Here's a pic- it's Fig and Honey.View attachment 59141
Thank you! I colored it with rose clay and honeyThe first successful batch is a great feeling! Your soap looks very nice. I love the color!
It will be so fun to have soapy conversations in person. Hoping at least one of the two will get the bug so you have a soap buddy to play with!My friends came by today to unmold their soaps. They brought their hubbies, so all three guys hung out and talked, while we ladies did our soap thing. Both ladies were so in love with their soaps and are already planning to come back to attempt a Taiwan circling swirl and a hanger swirl.
Well, Im not homeless, low income, or have low standards. I am also not a snob who sees anything wrong with an affordable food option for folks on a budget. There are some Aldi products I like better than their brand versions so I will stop there when we are in the area to get them. We also have recycled paper bags at our Aldi. I don't think Ive ever seen a plastic one.It's really interesting to get an “outside perspective” on Aldi. Here in Germany where they originate, they have been pioneers in wrapping everything in plastic, banning glass bottles in favour of plastic, and an overall “American” neo-liberal discounter business optimisation/industrialisation attitude, decades ago. Identical floor plan for all stores, uniform product range, focus on cheap store brands etc. People only go to Aldi voluntarily because they have large parking lots for their unreasonably sized cars, or you're broke and can't spare the extra cents to buy your stuff in a “better” store. Aldi is proverbial for the bottom of the food chain. Their plastic bags are literal icons for poverty and the homeless.
Either I just have no conception how low the standards across the pond really are, or Aldi strategists have made some decisions to go more “premium” when expanding overseas.
Your soap is beautiful - love the colors. Could you put the mold in a box and shim it with pieces of cardboard to prevent the bowing?I cut my TS drop swirl from the other day. Every soap that I have made in this mold was a structural fail.
So mad and frustrated that it came out an odd shape because of bowing... I tried to slice the top off to reveal the nice swirl. Cut too far and cut off the whole swirl. Ugggh. So now I cut those into bits for samples. I cut the soaps at 1.25" to help make up for the weight of the soap now that the whole top is gone. Then tried to straighten out the sides LOL. OMG this is the worst. If I could just get the mold to not bow out it would be a better experience. (cutting too much off the top is my fault, not the mold...cutting while pissed off is never a good thing lol).
I don't need advice on keeping it from bowing. I have tried everything...I tied strings around it and tied it tight. I put heavy cans of vegetables on the sides to hold it up straight. I even sat there holding it up with my hands until the soap was set.
I read on the website that some people put rubber bands around it. I just don't see trying to get a rubber band around a mold of liquid-ish soap and keeping it looking nice. That's where I got the idea to tie some yarn around it. I put the strings down first and put the mold on top of the yarn, then pulled up the yarn and tied it tight. Nope.
I've seen nicer molds that have a wooden mold to put the soap into with a silicone liner. I might try that one. I have another mold like that and it keeps its shape nicely.
It's a nice size in your hand. But I butchered it so bad to get it to look half decent. Right now as fresh soap it weighs 3.5 ounces, when it should be 5 after the cure.
The white looks nice. I never did a drop swirl in the ts mold before. I like the swirl better in the loaf mold. But I am not super unhappy with it.
View attachment 59168
Sorry to hear about your T&S blues. But the soap looks lovely! I had hubby make me a T&S from wood - no bowing there. But yeah - maybe you could gert something made to sit your silicone one in? Otherwise it sounds like you won't be using it again.I cut my TS drop swirl from the other day. Every soap that I have made in this mold was a structural fail.
So mad and frustrated that it came out an odd shape because of bowing... I tried to slice the top off to reveal the nice swirl. Cut too far and cut off the whole swirl. Ugggh. So now I cut those into bits for samples. I cut the soaps at 1.25" to help make up for the weight of the soap now that the whole top is gone. Then tried to straighten out the sides LOL. OMG this is the worst. If I could just get the mold to not bow out it would be a better experience. (cutting too much off the top is my fault, not the mold...cutting while pissed off is never a good thing lol).
I don't need advice on keeping it from bowing. I have tried everything...I tied strings around it and tied it tight. I put heavy cans of vegetables on the sides to hold it up straight. I even sat there holding it up with my hands until the soap was set.
I read on the website that some people put rubber bands around it. I just don't see trying to get a rubber band around a mold of liquid-ish soap and keeping it looking nice. That's where I got the idea to tie some yarn around it. I put the strings down first and put the mold on top of the yarn, then pulled up the yarn and tied it tight. Nope.
I've seen nicer molds that have a wooden mold to put the soap into with a silicone liner. I might try that one. I have another mold like that and it keeps its shape nicely.
It's a nice size in your hand. But I butchered it so bad to get it to look half decent. Right now as fresh soap it weighs 3.5 ounces, when it should be 5 after the cure.
The white looks nice. I never did a drop swirl in the ts mold before. I like the swirl better in the loaf mold. But I am not super unhappy with it.
View attachment 59168
I don’t remember the lye being cloudy - and I’ve dumped the jug out in my irritation so I won’t do any follow up testing. But that’s helpful to know.Potassium bicarbonate + chloride would be the secret shortcut to ZNSC faux sea water , weren't there the magnesium. I don't know by own experiments what to expect from added Mg, but I'd guess your lye solution is turbid? In the soap batter, Mg then would combine with fatty acid anions to form soap scum, that might clump into something similar to soda ash. In any case, the additions will eat up some lye, and impair SAP precision.
Gorgeous in spite of al the frustration it caused you. Before switching mostly to rigid-sided molds (with or without silicon liners), I had that same annoying problem. All manner of shoring up the side walls never made it perfect, but I tried my best as you say. I think it really does depend on the quality & rigidity of the silicone itself; even the ones with ribs on the outside, once full of soap, can bow and those uneven edges do try one's tolerance.I cut my TS drop swirl from the other day. Every soap that I have made in this mold was a structural fail.
So mad and frustrated that it came out an odd shape because of bowing... I tried to slice the top off to reveal the nice swirl. Cut too far and cut off the whole swirl. Ugggh. So now I cut those into bits for samples. I cut the soaps at 1.25" to help make up for the weight of the soap now that the whole top is gone. Then tried to straighten out the sides LOL. OMG this is the worst. If I could just get the mold to not bow out it would be a better experience. (cutting too much off the top is my fault, not the mold...cutting while pissed off is never a good thing lol).
I don't need advice on keeping it from bowing. I have tried everything...I tied strings around it and tied it tight. I put heavy cans of vegetables on the sides to hold it up straight. I even sat there holding it up with my hands until the soap was set.
I read on the website that some people put rubber bands around it. I just don't see trying to get a rubber band around a mold of liquid-ish soap and keeping it looking nice. That's where I got the idea to tie some yarn around it. I put the strings down first and put the mold on top of the yarn, then pulled up the yarn and tied it tight. Nope.
I've seen nicer molds that have a wooden mold to put the soap into with a silicone liner. I might try that one. I have another mold like that and it keeps its shape nicely.
It's a nice size in your hand. But I butchered it so bad to get it to look half decent. Right now as fresh soap it weighs 3.5 ounces, when it should be 5 after the cure.
The white looks nice. I never did a drop swirl in the ts mold before. I like the swirl better in the loaf mold. But I am not super unhappy with it.
View attachment 59168
Really nice! I like that gold mica line in the layered soap.I've been experimenting with essential oil blends. (Lavender; Clary sage; Ylang-ylang; Spearmint)And also made a cherry blossom, trying a hanger swirl for the second time. Learning so much on this forum, thank you all very much. Who knew learning could be so exciting and enjoyable.
I understand that nervousness. I’m about to mix my first 50/50 and the whole thing makes me anxious.I cut a soap batch. And made a big mb of 50/50 lye solution using my new 50 pound bucket of lye. It was weird getting lye from a big bucket. Don’t know why, it just was.
And I opened it with a smidge more nervousness than opening my usual little containers of lye. I had a silly fear that I’d fall into the bucket and accidentally dissolve myself.
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