Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Seasonal Soap using Seasonal Ingredients

Additives in soap can be very seasonal.  Let's see what I got this year for fall and winter:
Ginger Apple
(used freshly juiced ginger root)

Can't skip pumpkin for fall!
Pumpkin Chai
(high % of unrefined virgin pumpkin seed oil)

And Oktoberfest beer soaps!
Ginger Lime
(Paulaner Oktoberfest beer imported from Germany)



and another one
Dark Star
(Weihenstephaner Oktoberfestbier imported from Germany)


So what's your seasonal creation?

Friday, November 16, 2012

Oh Soy Wax, Why Are You So Difficult?!

Can you believe it is holiday season now?!  I'm a bit stressed preparing for holiday shows.  I don't sell in markets, only selling online for the sake of it.  The only physical markets I do are the Christmas shows.  Preparing for markets is sure getting on every single nerve of mine!
Making candle is not my main focus, just something to provide for the holiday shoppers as another choice for gift giving.  It is consider just an embellishment to my bath and body products.  Last year I used Ecosoya Advanced wax, it is a soy wax blend, it is probably the most bullet proof base you can use to make beautiful candles.  It was, every single pour perfect and no fuss!  BUT, yes, big but, the hot throw is not to be desired...  For those of you who do not make candle, hot throw meaning the scenting power when a candle is on fire burning.

This year I decided to switch to a high soy wax content base, to be more precise, 98% of soy wax with 2 % botanical oil.  Higher soy wax content means lower melting point and greater fragrance throw.  I was very excited to test this wax out.  Fall and winter holidays are the perfect time for some romantic burning candles!  Well, my grand plan only will work if this soy wax would cooperate!  The frosting and pot hole by the wick issues are driving me bunkers!  After consulting with other candle makers, I'm forced to accept the nature of the beast... sigh.  Alright, so I embrace it since I can't fight against it, right?!
HOW?!  So frustrating...  Then I gave up for a month, didn't want to deal with it.  Until now I have some time to think about it again I decided to quickly cool down what I pour in the jar then top it off with soy wax icing.
What I mean by soy wax icing is by beating the warm wax with an electronic hand held whisk the same way as making whipped cream.  There, I think I found my solution, and it actually adds visual interest and texture!


Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Cupcake Gone Wild

I don't make cupcake and cake soap that much but when I do, they go wild and out of control!
This is eye candy post today, sorry, no tutorial or experiment!



Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Calling for Milk Soap Blind Testers!

IT IS THE TIME!
READ ONLY IF YOU ARE OKAY WITH BREAST MILK SOAP

Awhile back I wrote a post about making breast milk soap, read here if you have not yet: Controversial Milk Soap
I have always wondered the actual difference between all milk soap, ok, not all, but I'm talking about "fat" milks like cow and goat milks.  Amount all the plant "milks" only coconut milk has enough fat to compare to animal milks.  I used same recipe, same lye discount, same lye concentration... etc., to make 4 batches of milk soap: goat milk, cow milk, breast milk, and coconut milk.  Now they are ready to put to blind test!

I'm looking for 8 US testers.  I will mail all 4 samples with numbers on them to selected testers.  Since this is a blind test, I won't reveal the answers until I get everyone's report back.  I will include a simple steps of how I want them tested and a couple questions for testers to answer back to me.
PLEASE, only if you are willing to test breast milk soap, if not, do no apply.  If you wish to test, please leave a comment and email me at: shiehdesignstudio@gmail.com 

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Am I Capable of Making Simplicity?

What and how does one perceive simplicity?  Is there to a point where simplicity = boring and uncreative?  Or even worse, sugar coat your creation as simple beauty because you are hitting soaper's block (similar to writer's block)?
As I pushed for more and more complicated design combinations this year, which required much time consuming planning ahead, the reverse question is, am I capable of finding my simplicity root?!  Or, am I just plain hitting soaper's block?!  But, the most important question I need to ask myself is, what do I perceive simplicity?!  I have no answer yet...
This is my Oatmeal Milk & Honey soap, made with local goat milk and honey with added colloidal oatmeal flour, simply, unscented, without "make up"


And this one, scented with matching synthetic fragrance oil with added titanium dioxide and pencil lined with red mica:


Or would you prefer my usual complicated project like this:

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Bubble Bath Struggle

I can make bath bomb (or bath fizzy) very easily and it works perfectly in the tub every single time.  But I really want some pizzazz to this, up a level to something more luxurious, or should I say fun?!   What kind of a bath is it without some bubble?!  However, I think I struggled to find the perfect combination of ingredients that holds the shape I want it to look.  The easiest rout is to make a dough and roll it into something like a sushi roll then cut it into pieces like what Lush does to their patent product Bubble Bar.  But as restless as I am, I would not be satisfied with an easy way out.  I had a vision of a bubble cube!

Oh~ only if I knew what I got myself into... It all sounded easy, no problem if I use silicone mold.  The problem is the binding agent.  This is a product somewhere in between a bath fizzy and a bubble bar.  It is a bubble bath bomb, meaning it fizzes to help dissolve in water easier but it also produces bubble.  If you have used a bath bomb or bath fizzy before you would know any liquid would set off the fizz action.  How to produce a perfect cube with sharp corners is my hardest challenge.
1st try: I used witch hazel spray, the same method as I bind bath bomb, and as you can see from the photo, a big 2" cube did not hold well.
2nd try: I used a synthetic liquid form of surfactant.  This one went well, but it got wet and started to behave a little like bread dough, hard to unmold.  It took a whole day to harden before I can attempt to take it out in one piece!
3rd try: To speed up the lengthen process, I attempted to freeze and hot air dry the cube.  Well, it all went well until the cubes were out of the freezer defrosting.  The moisture the frozen cubes attracted set off the fizz...  Not bad, just not the smooth texture I visioned.

My conclusion, maybe I should just be patient, stick with the 24 hour drying time and not fight with the nature of this recipe.  I tried my best to formulated to use mostly natural ingredients but in this case I still need to use a synthetic surfactant as a wet binding agent.  Here's the list of my ingredients:
Baking soda
Sodium laurel sulfoacetate
(a natural surfactant derived from coconut & palm oil)
Citric acid
Mango butter
Goat milk powder
Cocamide DEA
(this is the synthetic surfactant)
Polysorbate 80
(to emulsify mango butter to disperse into water)
Fragrance
Colorants

Now, the best thing about this experiment is that I got to be my own guinea pig!  Um... bubble bath...

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

The 200 Post!

This is the 200 post!!
Let's see it again after another 100 posts what the analysis of wordle says this time:
Ah~  Of course the word 'soap' is still the biggest!

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