Archive for April, 2010


The Craft Of Natural Soap: Love To Lather!


Soap. Whatever your brand choice, it's an everyday product and has thought to have been part of history from as far back as Ancient Babylon, around 2500 BC. In fact, an entire soap factory with finished bars was unearthed within the Pompeii ruins (pictured right). The Egyptians used a similar soap-like material to clear their skin diseases. It has always been considered both for its medicinal and cleansing purposes and today, soap is still the first simple preventative suggestion for our current modern-day epidemic, swine flu. Jen Marsden writes.

Legend has it that the foamy stuff got its name from Mount Sapo during Roman times. After animals were sacrificed in fires the melted animal fat was washed down the hill by rainfall into the Tiber River (pictured below right) where women regularly washed. They noticed they were much cleaner here. What used to be an utterly mystifying experience for the Romans grew into an art form, particularly with soap that has been cold processed where success lies in perfect formulation and timing.

While not found in nature, soap is formed by a basic chemical reaction called saponification. It is the result of a fatty or oily acid and an alkali reacting together to form a salt.  The alkali is usually Lye, a liquid solution of potash present in plant and wood material. Traditionally, potash or wood ash was collected from homesteads and farms by peddlers who would then sell it to the (usually female) soap maker. Soap making requires three simple steps: making the lye; cleaning the fats (the most unpleasant part of the job) to ensure a sweeter-smelling soap, and then mixing together the lye and fats and boiling.  There are two types of soaps – soft soap which is like jelly to the touch, and hard soap (pictured right), where common salt is added at the end of the process, ensuring the bars are easier to store and transport.

Soap making became particularly popular in England within the 1300s, where it would be cut from a large bar and customers were charged by the weight, just like at our deli counters today.  By the 1500s, the taste for more artisan and quality soaps in southern Europe and Italy developed, where they were made from animal-free vegetable oils, in particular from mild olive oil instead of the usual beef fat.  Well known luxury white soaps made from pure olive oil from Italy and France are still fashionable today:  Castile soap and Savon de Marseille, which takes up to two weeks to prepare by hand. With five generations of soap making expertise, Dr Bronner's Pure Castile Soap is widely known for its old-world quality and its versatility, which makes it the number one selling natural soap in America.

From the late 1800s onwards, bathing became fashionable and the commercialisation of soap became possible with the availability of sodium hydroxide where common salt was no longer needed in order to create firm soap. Soap powders could be produced cheaply. This became a profitable market for soap makers such as Andrew Pears, and William Hesketh Lever who founded the company Unilever. Both remain major, global household names. Unlike the few dedicated natural soap products by companies such as Simply Soaps and Bentley Organics that Biggreensmile.com champions, the majority of the soaps available today are far different from the time-honoured soap making process.  Instead, global brands use cheap detergents created from petroleum based products, or ingredients that, while found in nature, have been dramatically altered by energy intensive processes.

The craft of handmade cold-processed soap is more eco considerate as it does not require as much energy and heat. It's a simpler and cleaner method, and keeps the production to nature's own time. This is true soap making which provides an outlet for artistic expression. Handmade soap also usually has a wonderful blend of other exotic oils, organic herbs and spices, and pure essential oils. To create an exfoliating bar, oatmeal or fruit peel and even flower petals can be added. Jojoba, cocoa butter and shea butter may be added as additional moisturising benefit.  

Compared to commercial soap, handmade soap is particularly beneficial due to the glycerin that is contained naturally within the oil used. A natural colourless liquid by-product of the soap making process, glycerin is not removed ensuring it is a far more moisturising soap. Glycerin is a humectant, meaning that it attracts moisture to the skin and is particularly good for children. Clearer soaps tend to have high glycerine content. Mass-produced soaps often remove glycerine so it can be utilised in lotions and potions that make more money, as well as for the manufacture of dynamite (from nitroglycerin)! This means these soaps are more likely to dry the skin. There are plenty of oils and fats that can be used within soap making, including coconut oil which provides a lathering effect, hemp oil and the somewhat contentious palm oil.

Our verdict? Go for the more natural, traditional option of cold-processed soap making, with naturally high vegetable glycerine content and organic ingredients.

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Egyptian Musk

Pure Fragrance Oil. Stays on ALL day because it has no alcohol or water added!

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2 Handmade goats milk soap, all natural and organic, final product!http://www.thingsfromhomeinc.com These are my handmade goats milk soaps with all natural and organic ingredients, wrapped and ready for shipping! The video doesn't do them justice, so please stop by my website and check out the close up pictures of them, as well as detailed ingredient descriptions too!

My natural and organic handmade bath and body products are made especially to nourish and treat your skin with the finest ingredients available! Order a bunch today, or try the sample packs and get to know our products soon!

Thanks for watching, please subscribe, RATE my videos, and leave me any questions you may have on my channel!

Best Wishes

Mickey Dye-Ishikawa
Things From Home, inc

Duration : 0:6:19

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2 Interview:  Why All Natural Castile Soap?  Part2http://allnaturalsoapstore.com - Here is part two of an interview I did a little while ago with Tanya Ortiz of All Natural Soap Store. In this interview Tanya discusses the benefits of using all natural castile soaps as well as:

* Why bar soaps from your store may not be getting your totally clean
* The alarming reason commercial baby shampoo is no more tears
that has nothing to do with how mild or gentle it is
* Some surprising uses for castile soap plus a recipe for one of them
* Why not all castile soaps are created equally

So, turn up your speakers and listen to this informative interview!

http://allnaturalsoapstore.com

http://naturalhaircarebooks.com

Duration : 0:10:41

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I thought it would be a really cute gift for christmas

try these links

I made macadamia and vanilla soap and followed the instructions carefully. The only real mistake I can think I might have made would have been over whipping it, as I was no longer able to pour it into the mould as the instructions said, I had to spoon it in- too thick? But why would that cause the macadamia oil to predominately settle on the bottom and the vanilla fragrance oil on top? It ended up consistent in texture and firmness etc but the top slice is far darker than the bottom, which is oily. Is this a common mistake in soap making? What did I do wrong? I got the ingredients as a kit and they were pre-weighed and the instructions were specific.

I couldn't really say, but this website may give you some insight into what happened. She sounds like she knows her soap.

http://www.millersoap.com/

As much as soap making is fun, it can be sometimes frustrating and expensive. Experimentation can sometimes end in failure and soap batches rendered useless. The ingredients used like lye, fragrances or colorants can cut through the budget if one isn't careful. In order to let some soaps not go to waste, the Rebatching process is usually used.

Rebatching isn't really soap making but more of reusing. It is cutting, grating then melting already made soap in order to let it set again, this time hopefully it comes out just the way you like it. One can use a grater, meat slicer or food processor.

When it is heated in the double boiler or microwave, it should be placed in a boil-proof bag. Water should be added in order to give it the moisture it needs. Beer, milk or tea can also be used depending on the effect that you want. Other soap makers attest to the use of milk to give the batch a smoother texture. Place just enough liquid to wet the batch but do not let it drown in liquid. Using too much liquid will make it more difficult for the soap to harden.

image thumb Giving Soaps a second chance with Rebatching Lye water can be added although the soap maker should be as careful as possible as lye is more dangerous with a semi-hardened batch.

Additional fragrances or colorants can still be used. The soap will not completely melt but will have an oatmeal-like texture that can be moulded or casted again. More water will make it softer depending on what kind of texture one wants. If the soap maker is trying to correct the mistake of having too little fragrances or colorants, use a little more oil than usual because fragrances have a tendency to be swallowed by a semi-solid substance like that of a rebatched soap texture.

Again, as it does not completely melt, the soap maker can now place it by pushing it out of the bag and placing it in moulds. To let air bubbles out, the mould will have to be whacked over and over a hard surface to let the soap base fit the crevices of the mould.

The soap will never be as smooth as the first batch. Instead it will have a very rough, rustic look that may serve other soap makers' purposes while others not. Still, rebatching helps if only because it gives expensive ingredients a chance to be used again.

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21eOSDHe4gL. SL160  Thursday Plantation Tea Tree Skincare Soap 115g

Product Description
Thursday Plantation Tea Tree Skin Care Soap cleanses and purifies all skin types.FEATURES AND BENEFITS*Contains Tea Tree Oil a natural antisepticDIRECTIONS FOR USEFor external use only.Wet skin. Apply sufficient quantity to create a rich lather.Rinse thoroughly.DURATION OF USENo restriction on duration of use.CAUTIONS AND CONTRAINDICATIONSAlways read the label. Use only as directed. Discontinue use if sensitivity occurs.Do not use:*Internally: this product has been ... More >>

Thursday Plantation Tea Tree Skincare Soap 115g

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Tisserand Patchouli Organic Essential Oil 9ml

41t3v7laMCL. SL160  Tisserand Patchouli Organic Essential Oil 9ml

  • Organic -derived from plants that are grown free from man-made fertilisers, herbicides or pesticides
  • Exraction & Origin: from the herb grown in Indonesia
  • Intrinsic qualities & Aroma: earthy, spicy and mystical with a sweet woody aroma
  • Ideal for: massage or bath to unwind the mind and relax the body

Product Description
Pogostemon cablin - Extracted from the leaves of the herb grown in Indonesia, patchouli is an earthy, spicy and mystical oil with a sweet woody aroma. Ideal in massage or the bath to unwind the mind and relax the body. Blends well with bergamot, geranium and lavender.

Tisserand's pure essential oils are either organic, ethically harvested and wild crafted. Below is a definition of the three categories:

ORGANIC Certified organic essent... More >>

Tisserand Patchouli Organic Essential Oil 9ml

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