Showing posts with label melt and pour soap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label melt and pour soap. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Ombre Heart Soap

 

My first attempt at ombre heart design using melt and pour soapmaking technique. 
 
 
 
The project took less than an hour to finish.  I used red and blue soap colorants, clear and white soap base and added a dash of candy fragrance.



Friday, January 17, 2014

Rainbow Hearts and Heart Embeds

 

The flower arrangements inspired me to make as many handmade products as I can.  I followed  a tutorial from one of my sources for this.  
 
 
This is how it all started.  I poured the red soap, followed by the blue on the other side of the heart and then poured the yellow in between.  Notice the plain red soap on the side, that soap is going to be cut into hearts for embedding later. 
 
 
I finished the soap with white and sprinkled red glitter on three of the hearts.  The hearts and round molds were embedded with the hearts.
 

The different sized cookie cutters were perfect for this project. 
 
This picture is taken to show you the different layers and colors I used.  I tried this technique previously using the awareness ribbon.  The ribbon was covered with my white and did not show up in the final product.  This time I layered the hearts with the clear soap before pouring the white and the red and pink to some of the bars
 
All the soaps came out of the molds without difficulty and to prevent any crystallization from moisture absorption, I shrink wrapped them right away.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Valentine's Soap


 
My First Valentine's Day soaps.  I still have a bunch of gingerbread fragrance oil so these hearts smell like gingerbread.  It's fun when I took them out of the mold and they turned out perfectly shaped.

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Holiday Soap



I made these for the fundraising event  my friends and I organized for the Typhoon Haiyan/Yolanda victims in the Philippines.  These are fun whimsical and Christmasy soaps made just in time for the holidays.  I gave some to friends and a few mentioned that they accidentally placed them into their mouths before realizing that they are soaps.  I am still learning how to seal the soaps with shrink wrap and a hot gun.  Got the idea but the wrap still needed to tighten a bit more to look more professional.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Winter Soap

 
Christmas is just around the corner and so I decided to make more of the gingerbread men.  The mold held after being used a couple times.

 
I am also taking advantage of my friend D's molds that I still have with me.  Will have to return them soon.  I called the above soap "Winter scene".  Original idea was from my supplier's website.  I used the circle mold from D and added some shredded white soap base and two green tree soaps I made earlier to  a red and white base and poured a clear soap base on top to keep everything in place. This was my first attempt and I am very happy with the result.  

 
I also made a tiny snowman and placed them on top of the gingerbread men for the picture.  I guess they would look better added to some colorful winter scene.

 
D also lend me some flower soap molds and I played with them by just pouring the colored soaps in the main flowers and poured a white soap base for the rest of the mold.


 
I also tried to embed a tree, the awareness ribbon and flowers into some of the regular soap molds.  Although better than my previous attempt at embedding, I waited to cool the clear soap too long and they started to harden when I poured them and thus I got wrinkles and uneven clear top layer to the soaps.



 
Still needed a lot of practice but I am enjoying every creations so far.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Assorted Designs

 
A crafty friend thankfully lend me her soap molds.  Made me realized the potentials I can play with the different shapes.  For the round and hexagon, I did the double pour technique of basic white soap base and a clear soap base I colored with blue.  Although not an award winning design for people to go gaga over with, I was happy with the result.  It turned out just as I expected.  Pictures below shows the other side of the above soaps.

 
The awareness ribbon was a mold I bought for the October Awareness Month.  As you can see in the picture below.  The soap with the ribbon on top of the soap turned out just right.  Since, I like playing around, I decided to make the ribbon looked like it was embedded inside the rectangle and oval soap molds.  I did not get the result I expected for these.  I intended for the ribbon to be seen through a clear base but the white soap took over the entire ribbon. We can still see some part of the pink ribbon peeking out.  The plan was for the ribbon to be embedded inside the soap but completely visible supposedly.  I will have to play some more to get what I am envisioning for this. 

 
I had some leftover pink soap to fill up three happy face molds. 
 Till the next project. Thank you for stopping by. 
 

Friday, October 18, 2013

Gingerbread Men Soap


Today, Friday October 18, 2013, I decided to make some gingerbread men.  I used the leftover soaps for a few happy faces and a musical mold I got from our grocery store.  They turned out great as well.  The details showed and did not break at all as I was expecting.  My daughter Lyn saw the molds when they got home and just started peeling the soaps off.  The designs held and came off the mold just fine. The house smells like Christmas time. 

 
This time, I did not freeze the mold.  Practiced my patience and waited for a few hours before attempting to unmold the soaps.  They came out pretty easy and were not wet at all.
 
 
Because I sometimes like to do things fast.  I over poured the white details and had to do some cosmetic surgery to give the gingerbread men a sharp and clean look.  The hubby saw me removing tiny bits of pieces in the eyebrow area and was like " I thought it is just melt and then pour ". 


Definitely, not just melt and pour if you have different colors to add and has to be precise with the detailings.  Noticed the white soap in the supposedly only red top botton?  This is what happens when my impatience took over and I was not meticulously doing what I should have.



 
 Since the soap came out dry and I don't want any crystallization to happen.  I wrapped them right away and practiced making my own soap box.  I obviously still need to practice wrapping the soaps and making it tighter.  But at least these soaps are going to be protected from the elements.




Tuesday, October 15, 2013

My Very First Attempt at Soap Making

Tuesday, August 27, 2013, the day I received my first soap making supplies.
Oh what excitement!  After reading a lot about soap making and watching how to videos on youtube.    I thought that it would be too difficult for me to decide which fragrance, colors and base to use for my first project and so I ordered for a kit.   After opening the package, I got into work right away, I forgot to take pictures of the supplies.
 
The company included a free half an ounce of fragrance and I can't ignore it or wait for another batch of order to use it.  So I separated a few of the base for the free fragrance and grabbed some baking molds for it.  My impatience to just go ahead and avail of  everything in the package got the best of me.
 

 
The white mold came with the kit and the blue silicone ones are from my kitchen.
 

 
As you can see in the above picture, instead of spreading the gold dust, I ended up creating a few globs of it.
 
Some of the bars broke off into two or three layers.  Definitely need to practice some more.
 
 The white top layer was sprinkled with the gold dust and the layers in between was supposed to be a pretty swirl of pink, blue and purple then a clear bottom layer.

Definitely a keeper hobby.  No needles flying all over the house whenever the machine is in trouble.  I just need to find a good supplier that ships faster than this company I am using now.  The supplies were good but this was my first and I don't have any other company to do any comparison yet.

It was great fun making it and waiting for the final result was satisfying even for a first time soap maker like me.

First Halloween Soaps

 


 
Thursday, September 12, 2013.  This was my second shipment of soap making supply.  Halloween is just around the corner and so I ordered for a Jack-O-Lantern kit from another supplier a few days after ordering my first kit.  This was my first attempt at using designed soap molds.   
 

 
The Jack-O-Lantern soaps were a little stubborn  to unmold and so I put them in the freezer for a few minutes, some soap bloggers suggested this method of unmolding the soaps.  The freezing makes it easier for the soap to pop out of the mold but they turned out to feel wet instead.  I will check it out tomorrow to see if they will dry out.
 
As usual I used kitchen mold for the leftover soaps.  I used happy face silicone molds and the blue flower designed silicone mold and tried to make swirls and a double pour technique according to the soap tutorial I've been watching.
 
My son Vyn said the Jack-O-Lantern looked scarier in the above picture when the black soap was spilled all over the faces.  I like the cleaned up looked better though.
 
The happy faces were just a mixture of both the leftover orange and black to make them looked like spooky happy faces.  Was I successful in making them spooky?
 
 
 

Ghosts and Bats



Thursday, October 3, 2013, my third batch of melt and pour or sometimes referred to as soap casting soap making technique.  I ordered for yet another soap mold "ghost" from yet another soap making supplier.  I also came across a "bat" mold while grocery shopping and was tempted.

 
 

 
The designs turned out great.  But if you look closer, the soaps have white crystals all over them.  Further reading on soap making revealed that moisture and glycerine content is the culprit.  My first two batches did not do this.  I wonder if it was because I ordered from another supplier and got a less than stellar quality of the products or the moisture in our house changed.  More reading still needed.
 
 
As you can see the designs came out exactly as expected.  I also am able to prevent a mess from happening with the black color for the Jack-o-lanterns.  I was not excited with my black happy faces and so I remelted the black happy faces from my second batch and made them into black bats which I thought was more appropriate.  
 
 
 
 
I froze the mold before unmolding again because I am such an impatient soul and they all came out easily but was wet again.  The hubby who is a chemist suggested not to freeze them the next time.  I will try not to freeze the soaps on my next batch and see if we would get a dry and easy to unmold soap.
 
 
 
Crystallization also happened with this soap batch and according to soap blogs it was because of not wrapping them right away.  The moisture in the air is not good for the glycerin content of this soap making technique.
 
 
 
Glycerine absorbs water in the air thus is very moisturizing to the skin but it caused the soaps to sweat and crystallized when expose to moisture.  Still obviously learning from other soap crafters and bloggers.  Also  comparing product quality from different suppliers.  Will see if I improve for my next batch.
 
 
Look at how sweaty and wet they were, this was taken right after I unmold them and after being in the freezer for a good half hour.  Just learned from a soap book that if I should freeze the soap, it should only be done for at least 5 minutes.