Archive for September, 2009

Is it possible to make liquid soap out of melt & pour glycerin base?

I don’t want to buy liquid soap base if there is a way I can turn m&p glycerin base, which I already have, into liquid soap. If it is possible to do this can someone direct me to a recipe or tell me how it is done? Google was no help, all it found me was from-scratch recipes or liquid soap bases for sale.

The soap mentioned at the Miller soap website on the previous post is about how to turn Cold process soap into clear glycerin soap. Clear glycerin soap is still a solid soap, not a liquid.

I have not found anywhere on the net that has instructions for how to make a solid (bar) soap into a liquid soap, it just does not work. Liquid soap are made by using a completely different process and different form of lye than when making bar soap.

The method I use to make soaps liquid (for laundry) is to boil about 2 quarts water, turn off heat and add shredded soap bits, 4-8 oz. Sitr from time to tame as it melts. let it cool completely and pour into another container. This creates a soap which is rather slimey, and has some clumpy areas in it when cooled. Not one you want to use as a hand soap.

There are some excellent natural liquid soap bases out there, that work well for many things.

One I like to use can be found here………

http://www.glorybeefoods.com/gbf/Shop_ProductDetail.cfm?PC=5&PSC=256&P=13069&Product_Name=soap,%20liquid&Token=76.2.156.58:{ts_2009-03-15_21:01:33}-592998

2 Comments »

admin on September 26th 2009 in melt and pour soap

What kind of licensing do I need To Make and Sell Home Made Soaps?

What kind of licensing do I need To Make and Sell Home Made Soaps?
I am starting my own natural baby skin care line and am wondering if someone can help me out with what I need to do as far as licenses, Patents?, etc to make sure I am doing everything legal and no one copies my brand.
0 seconds ago – 4 days left to answer.

send your recipe to a lawyer with a SASE and have him/her send it back to you…..file for a patent thru the U.S. patent office…find a manufacturer to make your product..until then, you could test sell it at flea markets and have a results paper for the ppl to fill out…if it sells then, go to various stores and try to have them put some on their shelves……and good luck

3 Comments »

admin on September 26th 2009 in how to make soaps

Hi, Is it okay to use tap water to make up my lye solution? I am very new to soap making, please advise?

I have recently started to make soap for my personal use. At the moment I am using tap water. Is this okay or should I be using distilled water?
I am curious about what everyone else is doing

Tap water. Distilled has no benefit for making soap. the acidity or alkalinity of tap water is not enough to make a difference.
Don’t forget that you can make special soaps too. Like adding a little lighter fluid for Naphtha soap, or Glycerin.

3 Comments »

admin on September 26th 2009 in soap making

I want to make handmade soap at home without using lye or any chemical ingredients. Please suggest recipes.?

I want to make handmade soap at home without using lye or any chemical ingredients. I want beeswax as one of the ingredients in my soap.

I would suggest doing some research on what lye actually is. It is a necessary component in soapmaking and even if you use a melt and pour soap it contained lye at some point.
Good LUck

4 Comments »

admin on September 24th 2009 in soap recipes

I’m trying to find a recipe for soap or shampoo for horses. I make cold process soap.?


The best shampoo/conditioner/soap for Horses is called Mane N Tail. It is made specifically for their thick tails and manes.

3 Comments »

admin on September 24th 2009 in soap making process

Melt & Pour Soap Making Supplies in Australia?

Does anyone know where to buy M&P soap making equipment witin Australia? Im talking about M&P base, colours, fragrances, tolls/equipment (cutters, etc.), molds/moulds, etc.

Thanks.

There are a number of Australian websites for M&P supplies. Here are a few.

http://www.oilsandsoap.com.au/melt-pour-base-c-125.html?osCsid=96483c3ac2c22700187e505f7b035ae8

http://aussiesoapsupplies.com.au/Soap-Bases-c-33.html

http://www.aquasapone.com.au/mpkits.html

Here’s a mould and fragrance-oil supplier.

http://bigtreesupplies.com.au/

Hope this is what you needed.

1 Comment »

admin on September 24th 2009 in melt and pour soap

How to make soaps?

How to make jojoba shower gel.

You’ll need a cup of water, 1 teaspoon of cornstarch or arrowroot, 2 tablespoon of glycerin, 1 tablespoon of jojoba oil, 1 teaspoon of cane sugar, 4 tablespoons of aloe Vera gel, 8 to 10 drops of Essential oil (Note: NOT FRAGRANCE OIL) and 1 or 2 drops food colouring or vegetable dye.

Place all the ingredients except food coloring in a bowl and mix until smooth. Add food coloring if desired. Pour into a squeeze bottle and use within 24 hours. All of the ingredients can be bought at http://www.heirloombodycare.com.au/ or http://www.aussiesoapsupplies.com.au/ There is heaps of good recipes at those sites as well. If you don’t have all that fancy stuff, you can just get some unscented shampoo/liquid soap, add joboba oil (You might want to also add some extra aloe Vera gel to thick it back up) and hey presto.
Nice choice with the Jojoba oil, it penetrates deep into your skin.

4 Comments »

admin on September 24th 2009 in how to make soaps

Where is the cheapest place online to purchase soap making supplies?

I have recently taken up soap making as a hobby. Can someone tell me the cheapest place online to purchase supplies such as molds, fragrances and such?

Thanks so much!

The best place that I’ve found for carrier oil:
Soaper’s Choice – http://www.soaperschoice.com/
Sam’s club or Costco for large quantities of soybean, canola and olive oils
If you know someone that has a business, Restaurant Depot is a great place for coconut, olive, soybean, canola, etc. oils in large quantities

The best places that I’ve found for everything else:
Brambleberry – http://www.brambleberry.com/
Camden Grey – http://www.camdengrey.com/
Ellen’s Essentials – http://www.ellensessentials.com/catalog/
Fragrance and Flavors – http://www.fragranceandflavors.com/Default.aspx
Wellington Fragrance Company – http://www.wellingtonfragrance.com/index.cfm?UserID=1920597&jsessionid=5e3010fcf08ak$C9$84$
Majestic Mountain Sage – http://www.the-sage.com/
Pine Meadows – http://www.pinemeadows.net/
Southern Soapers – http://www.southernsoapers.com/cart/index.php?main_page=index

These are websites that I go to when I need specific essential oils, fragrance oils, colorants and botanicals. What you can’t find at one the other may have.

I found that it’s best to buy lye locally if you can, unless you’re planning on buying large quantities. Most home improvement centers carry lye. My local sources in Franklin, WI (a suburb of Milwaukee) are: Lowe’s, Blain’s Farm & Fleet, Mill’s Fleet Farm & Menards. You can find it in the plumbing areas of those stores. Make sure that you check the label and it says that it’s 100% sodium hydroxide (lye). The brand that I purchase the most is Roebic 2 Lbs. Heavy Duty Crystal Drain Opener. The other brand is ROOTO CRYSTALS OF HOUSEHOLD LYE DRAIN OPENER in a 1 lb. container.

Best of luck with your new hobby.

3 Comments »

admin on September 24th 2009 in soap making

Must Haves for Any At-home Chef

With the holidays on their way soon, many people will be beefing up kitchens to handle the increased demand for ‘fit for a king’ meals. Not being a professional Chef shouldn’t stop you from being able to cook like one. But, you’ll need the right tools to create those tantalizing dishes. Read on and find out the five tools that no kitchen cook should be without.

Mixing Bowls

Make sure that you have a good, quality set of mixing bowls on hand – the bigger the better! Many dishes need to be beaten, blended or mixed. You’ll be glad you didn’t skimp on the mixing bowls when you need to perform any of those tasks. Most professional chefs prefer to use stainless steel mixing bowls. However, there are many quality plastic sets available, like the ones made by OXO. But be aware that plastic bowls can become hard to clean over time, especially if used for heavy duty sauces, and may need to be replaced.

Pre-Seasoned Cookware

Cast iron skillets, pots and pans have long been a choice of the pros. But, cast iron cookware can be a little daunting. Seasoning, pre-seasoning, re-seasoning, cooking the seasonings in, oils to use, etc. to ensure your skillet is ready, is a hassle many cooks would rather not deal with. Now you don’t have to. You can buy cast iron cookware galore – already seasoned – so that you have no fuss and still get the same great benefits of those using simple cast iron. Lodge is a well known maker of pre-seasoned cookware and offers many different types of cast iron cookware. Be aware –soap nor dishwashers should be used for your prized possessions.

Specialty Measuring Spoons

If you’ve ever seen one of grandma’s old recipes refer to a pinch, smidgen or dash and have had to take a guess at the meaning (and hope you’re right) then you absolutely must grab a set of pinch, smidgen or dash measuring spoons. No more guessing or testing your interpretations on your guests (as fun as that may be). This set also makes a great conversation starter – especially at family gatherings where elder members may take you on a trip down memory lane.

First out Pie Spatula

What could possibly ruin the perfect homemade Dutch crumb apple pie? Having it fall apart while you try to get that first piece out of the pie dish. Well, here is a secret of the pros – use a first out pie spatula. You bake the spatula in with the pie. When the pie comes out of the oven and cools, you make the cuts and lift that first piece out in perfect appetizing condition!

Kitchen Companion Guide

Ever wonder how long you need to steam asparagus? Not sure how to stick a thermometer in a turkey? Never butterflied a pork chop before? For all the weird, rarely used information you may need, while preparing a feast, you can turn to a kitchen guide. Look for a kitchen guide which specializes in everything and anything you may need to know while cooking any meal in any kitchen. For a complete guide that has gotten rave reviews, check out the Williams-Sonoma Kitchen Companion: The A to Z Guide to Everyday Cooking, Equipment and Ingredients.

Many of the above items may not be featured at your local retail store, so you might want to find a local kitchen specialty store near you or do your shopping online. But, if you enjoy the art of cooking and want to be armed with the best tools possible, you now have a few more to add to your arsenal which will help you cook like the pros.

Michael Lansing spends his free time cooking for family and friends, as well as serving as a contributing editor for CookingSchools101.com

Blank
http://www.articlesbase.com/self-help-articles/must-haves-for-any-athome-chef-88858.html

No Comments »

admin on September 23rd 2009 in soap recipes

Improve your Hair and Skin. See Results in Days

Why is coconut oil the best oil for your skin?

Coconut oil is excellent as a skin moisturiser. A study shows that extra virgin coconut oil is as effective and safe as mineral oil when used as a moisturiser, with absence of adverse reactions.

When bathing or showering, soap washes the protective layer of oil and acid off our skin. Often afterwards the skin becomes tight and dry. Adding moisturizers helps the skin feel better, but it does not replace the acid or the protective medium chain fatty acid layers that was removed. Your skin is vulnerable to infection at this time. You would think that your body would be clean and germ-free after a bath. But germs are everywhere, floating in the air, on our clothes and everything we touch. Many germs survive washing by hiding in cracks and folds of the skin. Before long your skin is again teaming with microorganisms, both good and bad. Until sweat and oils return to reestablish the body’s chemical barrier your skin is vulnerable to infection. If you have a cut or cracked skin, this can allow streptococcus, staphylococcus and other harmful germs entry into the body. By using a coconut oil cream, lotion or just pure coconut oil you can quickly help reestablish the skin’s natural antimicrobial and acid barrier. Many people use coconut oil on their skin after every bath.

The coconut oil will aid in removing the outer layer of dead skin cells, making the skin smoother. The skin will become more evenly textured with a healthy “shine”. While doing this the coconut oil will penetrate into the deeper layers of the skin and strengthen the underlying tissues.

Most commercial creams and lotions are largely water. Their moisture is quickly absorbed into dry, wrinkled skin. As the water enters the skin, it expands the tissues, like filling a balloon with water, so that wrinkles fade away and the skin feels smoother. But this is only temporary. As soon as the water evaporates or is carried away by the blood stream, the dry, wrinkled skin returns. No matter how hard you try people will never be able to permanently cure dry, wrinkled skin with any commercial body lotion or body care merchandise. In addition to water, most lotions have an oil of some type. This oil is almost always a highly refined vegetable oil deficient of all natural protective antioxidants. One product in our food supply and in body care merchandise that leads to a great deal of free radicals is oxidized vegetable oils.

The ideal lotion is one that is made from an oil that not only softens the skin, but protects it against damage, promotes healing and gives it a more youthful, healthy appearance. Coconut oil fits that description.

Our skin is made up of connective tissues. These tissues give our skin strength and elasticity. When we are young and healthy the skin is smooth, elastic and supple. This is the effect of powerful connective fibers. As we age their fibers are constantly subjected to free-radical attack which breaks them down. As a result, connective tissues become hardened and lose both elasticity and strength. The skin loses its capability to hold itself together and begins to sag and become wrinkled. Once young, soft and smooth the skin turns dry and leathery.

The oil our bodies produce is called sebum. Sebum is secreted by oil glands (sebaceous glands) located at the root of every hair as well as other places. This oil is very important to skin health. It softens and lubricates the skin and hair and prevents the skin from drying and cracking. Sebum also contains medium chain fatty acids, in the form of medium chain triglycerides, that can be released to fight harmful germs.

Once a free-radical reaction is started it can cause a chain reaction which produces more free radicals, which ultimately damages thousands of molecules. The only way our body has to fight them is with antioxidants. When a free radical comes into contact with an antioxidant, the chain reaction is stopped. For this reason, it is good to have plenty of antioxidants in our cells and tissues to protect us. The number of antioxidants we have in our tissues is determined to a large extent by the nutrients in our diet. Having anti-oxidants in skin care goods is important, too. Dr. Ray Peat, a biochemist who has written about the antioxidant properties of coconut oil, states “It is well established that dietary coconut oil reduces our need for vitamin E, but I think its antioxidant role is more general than that, and that it has both direct and indirect antioxidant activities.” Virgin Coconut Oil is especially useful in fighting free-radicals, as it is unrefined and hasn’t been extracted of any of its natural components through the refining process.

Conventional body care goods that are made with refined vegetable oils which have all the antioxidants stripped from them are highly prone to free-radical generation both in and outside the body. That is why eating processed vegetable oils can cause a deficiency in vitamin E and other antioxidants. The antioxidants are used up fighting off free radicals causing permanent damage to connective tissues. This is also the reason why you should be careful about the type of oils you use on your skin, and in your lotions, creams and lip balms. If you use a lotion, or cream with a refined oil in it you are in fact causing your skin to age faster. The lotion, though it may bring temporary improvement will actually accelerate the aging of the skin and even promote skin cancer through the free radicals that are readily formed from the refined vegetable oil..

Coconut oil will absorb easily, keep the skin soft, and yet without feeling greasy.

Pure virgin coconut oil is the best natural ingredient for skin lotion available. It prevents destructive free-radical formation and supply’s protection against them. It helps to keep connective tissues strong and supple so that the skin doesn’t sag and wrinkle. In some cases it might even restore damaged or diseased skin. The oil is absorbed into the skin and into the cell structure of the connective tissues, limiting the damage excessive sun exposure can cause.

Cocout Oil is not like other oils used to soften rough, dry skin. It will help to reduce chronic skin inflammation within days and be soothing and healing to wounds, blood blisters, rashes, etc.

Coconut oil for your scalp and scalp

What coconut oil can do for your skin it can do for your hair.

In India and Sri Lanka, coconut oil is commonly used for styling hair, and cooling or soothing the head and offer stress relief.

Beauticians who are familiar with coconut swear by it. It softens the hair and conditions the scalp. Using the coconut oil as a pre-wash conditioner can rid a person of dandruff better than a medicated shampoo.

It is wonderful to use as a hair conditioner.

The protective environment of the skin and how coconut oil helps

Our skin is home to many tiny organisms, most of which are harmless; some are beneficial. At least one variety of bacterium is essential to the healthy environment on our skin. It feeds on the sebum, breaking down the tryglycerides into free fatty acids. The bacteria actually feed on the glycerol part of the triglyceride. This leaves fatty acids which are now “freed” from the glycerol unit that held them together. Medium chain fatty acids which are bound to the glycerol unit as they are in coconut oil have no antimicrobial properties. However, when they are broken apart into free fatty acids, they become strong antimicrobials.

So these bacteria convert the medium chain triglycerides (in the sebum or on the skin) into free fatty acids that can kill disease-causing bacteria, viruses, and fungi. The combination of the slightly acid pH and medium chain fatty acids has a protective chemical layer on the skin that prevents infection from disease-causing organisms. Due primarily to the action of bacteria, the oil on the surface of your skin and hair is composed of between 40 and 60 percent free fatty acids. The medium chain fatty acids in the sebum provide the protective layer on the skin that kills harmful germs. Coconut oil is nature’s richest source of medium chain fatty acids.

When coconut oil is put on the skin it doesn’t have any immediate antimicrobial action. However, when bacteria which are always present on the skin turn these triglycerides into free fatty acids, just as it does with sebum, the result is an increase in the number of antimicrobial fatty acids on the skin and protection from infection. The free fatty acids also help to contribute to the acid environment on the skin which repels disease causing germs.

Coconut Oil is an excellent ingredient to use in healing salves and ointments. People have used a coconut oil/crushed garlic mixture at night to eliminate plantar warts and athlete’s foot with great results.

In the making of soaps, the soap does not have a tallow smell nor the smell of a vegetable oil. Instead, it has a nice fresh smell and yields a nice fluffy lather. Coconut oil is one of the most popular oils used in soap making.

Roger Bert
http://www.articlesbase.com/health-articles/improve-your-hair-and-skin-see-results-in-days-76040.html

4 Comments »

admin on September 23rd 2009 in soap making process