Pink Clay CP Soap

Now that my clay orders have arrived, I should try experiment with them on my new batch of cold processed soap. In this batch, I use many stuffs from my new order, including the clay, new fragrance oil, and new silicone soap mold. I mixed a little bit of the white clay with pink clay to tone down the reddish pink color. As for the fragrance, I used citrusy yuzu oil.

I had no idea how I came up with that color and fragrant combination, totally not matching ( ⚆ _ ⚆ ) Probably a yellowy or cream color would work better with such fragrant 🙂

But overall, I am pleased with soap and how it lathers. The addition of clay does help to retain the fragrant even weeks after curing process, so I will definitely use clay again in my next batch!

 

 

CP Soaping Supplies

I have made few batches of CP soap so far and have thoroughly enjoyed the each process of making them as much as the soap itself. As such I am still a beginner at this CP soap making, my soaping supplies are still very limited so far and would very much like to add more to the list 🙂 But here are all the items I keep in my cp soap box:

  • Base Oils and Butters

These are the oils that are gone through the saponification process to create a soap bar. I have only very few base oils, namely olive oil, extra virgin coconut oil, coconut oil, rice bran oil, castor oil, and sweet almond oil. Palm oil is another base oil that is very common used to make cp soap, but since my soap are all palm oil free, I have never bought any. I just simply tweak the recipe that contains palm oil and replace with other base oils that have similar properties, such as cocoa butter or shea butter. Butters are also packed with vitamins that helps to nourish our skin, I have cocoa butter and shea butter which I normally use just either one in a single soap recipe.

  • Lye

The other most important ingredient for cp soap is of course lye or caustic soda or sodium hydroxide. This is what trigger the saponification process when mixed with base oils. It is harsh when comes in contact to skin, hence you need protecting clothing when making cp soap, to ensure no splash of this lye mixture will be come in contact to your skin/eyes.

  • Essential and fragrant oils

These oils are the contributor to how your soap smell like. The difference between those two are essential oils are natural, whereas fragrant oils are synthetic. Being non-natural does not necessarily means fragrant oils are not good, there are many good qualities fragrant oils that have tested  for safe to skin. And we can not extract natural oils from every plants/fruits, for example strawberries, pears, and many others, which we can have now with fragrance oils. I only have a very small collection of essential/fragrance oils: coffee, oat and honey, jasmine, rose, lemongrass and ginger. I have just placed an order for couple with citrusy notes which are yet to be delivered.

  • Clay

Clay are additions to your soap, which not only acts as natural colorants but also produce soap bars that have good properties to your skin. To my knowledge there are white, pink, red, green, bentonite, beige and black clay. Each color has different purpose on the skin; for example white clay is very gentle for sensitive and dry skin, pink clay helps to firm and tone the skin, red clay for dehydrated and matured skin, green for detoxification and acne prone skin, bentonite for tissue repair, beige clay for detoxifying, and lastly the black clay known for its oxygenating properties nourishes the skin. Some people also added clay to help the fragrant to stick to the cp soap better. I have just ordered white, pink, beige and bentonite clay which are also yet to come.

  • Ground coffee, oats, honey

These are just other additions I add to the soap for color, fragrance, or simply for the goodness it brings to the soap.

  • Soap molds

If you read my first posts on cp soap making here and here, I used cleaned soy milk carton as soap mold. I only used a real soap silicone log mold when I made these soap bars. I am actually thinking of getting some other models, but haven’t decided yet.

  • Other equipment, such as stick blender, spatula, plastic spoons, several containers, measuring jug, digital weight, and knife for cutting up the soaps.

Where do I get my supplies from?

Some of the oils, lye and the last mentioned additives (coffee, oats and honey) are from local supermarkets. The other ingredients are mostly from Australian online soap supplies shops. I tend to get them from those located in NSW mainly due to shipping cost consideration 🙂 As for the soap molds, I bought my silicone log mold from eBay. The equipment came from various shops from hot dollar shops to Daiso to Kmart.

Hope this information might be of help to you who just starting on CP soap making and happy soaping! ^̮^

Jasmine – Rose CP Soap and Green Tea – Blossoms CP Soap

I have received my silicone soap log mold last week and I have made two batches of floral note CP soaps since 🙂

The first batch I made was this Jasmine and Rose CP soap, still using almost same composition of oil as my honey-oat milk cp soap. Instead of oat milk, I just used water to dilute my lye in this batch and I added jasmine and rose oils for fragrances. the combination is lovely, my husband claimed it reminds him of Balinese spa 😀 Again, in this batch I don’t use any colorant, so this is the natural color of all the ingredients together.

Continue reading “Jasmine – Rose CP Soap and Green Tea – Blossoms CP Soap”

DIY Honey Oatmilk Soap

Since my first trial with CP soap (DIY Caffeinated Soap) and it ended up great, I am more keen to try on other recipes. And when I stumbled on this honey and oat milk soap recipe, I knew I just couldn’t go pass it. Honey is well-known for its anti-bacterial benefit, packed with anti oxidants and can help with clarifying pores. Oatmeal has anti-inflammatory properties hence is really good for sensitive skin, moisturising, helps treat acne, eczema, and rashes. I can only imagine how good the soap be if I can include those two super ingredients together.

Continue reading “DIY Honey Oatmilk Soap”

DIY Caffeinated Soap Bar

On our Bali honeymoon trip where we had a walk around Monkey Forest Street and found this handmade soap shop has inspired me to make my own soap bar. I personally prefer soap bar to soap gel/liquid and I used to use Dove, I think it smells so good especially during winter time and it claims to leave the skin soft, which I can’t attest because I used body lotion after shower. Soap bar also lasts a lot longer that soap liquid, hence the savings that I can allocate to other stuffs on my shopping list 😀 It is also a good practice that is environmental friendly (still proud however small my contribution is). Since I started my research on handmade soap bar, I became more conscious of long list of chemical substances put into a store-bought soap bar and that I actually rub them on my skin. Although they have never irritated me so far or as I aware of, it still kind of puts me off buying them.

Continue reading “DIY Caffeinated Soap Bar”