Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta artisan soaps. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta artisan soaps. Mostrar todas las entradas

jueves, 12 de mayo de 2016

TEARDROP TECHNIQUE - SOAP CHALLENGE MAY 2016



This month's Amy Warden's soap challenge was about the teardrop technique. This technique was first introduced by an incredibly talented Taiwan soaper known in Facebook as 'sweetly sweetly sweetly' and made more widely known by my fellow country man and equally talented, Sergio Masala. His videos are a pleasure to watch, always perfectly matching his creations to a piece of music that has either inspired them, or has come to his mind upon seeing the result of his art.


I really should call this entry "Tears of Joy and Despair", and here is why.

I usually leave the challenge to the last minute. I just can't help it, I'm made like that. This means I normally don't have more than one go at it due to lack of time, and this month was no different. This is my one and only try before the deadline. I wasn't able to participate the last couple of months and I really, really wanted to do it this time, so I had to concentrate and try to get it right. 


My recipe has a high amount of trace speeding hard oils, so I decided to hand stir this batch and use a non speeding essential oil blend of lavender, rosemary and several citrus oils for scent.  This was one of those rare times when I felt I was quite in control of the process. I could almost hear Amy whispering in my ear the whole time "...pour slowly..., pour slowly..." ;-)



After I finished I felt I would get a more or less satisfying result, especially considering it was my first go at this technique. Mostly, I was proud of myself for having been patient enough during stirring and pouring. Those would be my tears of joy. 

But,........ that's when I ran out of the very little patience I have :-(





It was only Thursday morning Australia time, so I could have waited a bit longer before unmoulding, right? Well, no. I just couldn't keep my hands to myself, could I? So this is what happened:




Both ends of the log!!! And these, as you will all understand, are my tears of despair. 


I will certainly play with this technique again and try to get the tear drop more "suspended" by pouring more base soap at the bottom and/or let it set up for longer before pouring the teardrop part.


Still, I managed to save six decent bars out of the lot, and the four sadly torn remaining ones will be put to good use in the family shower in a few weeks from today.


Good luck everyone! 




sábado, 23 de enero de 2016

CIRCLING TAIWAN SWIRL

One more month, one more soap challenge. This time is a modified version of the Taiwan swirl. After completing the Taiwan swirl, the pattern becomes wavy by circling the skewer around the mould and, when you cut horizontally, the two bars at each end (if you're lucky...) put side by side mirrorwise will resemble a lotus flower.

One of the many things I like about the monthly challenges is that I often take the oportunity to try other things that are often put off. This month, besides the technique, which was also a first for me, I did another two new things: 1) I hand stirred for the first time (talk about being stick blender dependent...) and 2) I tried a vegan alternative to tussah silk.  

The first one I consider a success. Even after 3 years soaping I will still be haunted by "insufficient stirring" horror stories while with the blender in hand, so I have the tendency to do those extra 2 seconds that can potentially ruin a good swirl. I think I have got better lately, but still. So, since this techique required a very thin trace, I decided this was the moment to take the advice of other experienced soapers, like Kenna Cote and hand stir this one. I'm very happy with the result, but I guess that's only because it was a 1 kg. batch (about 2 Lb.), you will not find me hand stirring a 5 kg. batch, sorry :-(  But I will definitelly hand stir small batches from now on. You learn so much about the behaviour of soap this way and you're so much more in control of the consistency you need for whatever technique you're implementing.

I could probably have stirred a bit more because the batter was on the 'a bit too thin' side, but that did not have any consequences of poor saponification, or even delayed unmoulding. It actually had the very best final texture I remember in a long time. Absolutelly zero bubles and smoth as a baby's bum. The problem was more the batter seeping through neighbouring compartments and the elastic bands not being enough to hold the dividers down. Although this could rather be a problem of my DIY dividers... 

The great thing about this mould is tha the side reinforcements give you excellent guidance to place all three dividers
Minimum amount I could purchase. Grrrr...
The second new thing I tried didn't leave me as happy. I LOVE tussah silk in soap and I use it every time I am not using an alternative liquid. But that single ingredient makes most of my current soaps non vegan. So I have been thinking about an alternative for a while. I thought bamboo tops or banana tops could do the trick. The area where I now live is famed for their bananas (although the industry has now given way to other more profitable crops) and banana tops is said to have "silk like properties", so I decided to try it in this small batch. Initially it seemed to work fine, some of it disolved just like silk does the first moments you put it in the lye water, but after half an hour it was clear it was not going to substantially disolve any further. Certainly not it the time that it takes for the lye water to cool and I was not in the mood for waiting until the next day to see what happened to it, so I filtered it when it was time to mix it with the oils. I will have to wait until the soap is ready to use before I can tell if the minute amount that disolved made any difference to the soap or not. My guess is it hasn't. We'll see.  


The fibers in lye water after half an hour, only slightly more
disolved, despite my persistent stirring of it
Banana tops just stirred into the lye water












As for the soap, I wished it would have turned a bit more wavy, but I stopped circling around the mould because one of the ends was running out of the third colour and it was important that the end had all three colours for a better effect. 


Since it was meant to resemble a lotus flower, I scented it with a lovely flowery blend of rose geranium, lavandin and petitgrain essential oils.

Cute little mantra hearts made with the leftover soap batter. I measured the three parts pretty carefully, so I guess I wasn't as careful when pouring each section, with the dividers moving and some soap seeping into neighbouring sections...
For the colours I used ultramarine blue and titanium dioxide for the blue, burlesque mica from 'U-make it up' for the dark pink and titanium dioxide for the white. 



Best of luck to everyone! I can't wait to see what you guys have created :)

Anna

viernes, 18 de diciembre de 2015

IMPRESSION MAT SOAP CHALLENGE - THREE WISE MEN SOAP



This month's challenge was about using impression mats to texture your soap. The mats could be store bought, like the ones used to decorate cakes, or made with silicone. I lacked the time to make my own or the money to buy the ready made ones, so I used some tiny ones that I already had from another of my crafty areas of interest: polymer clay.

I initially thought of a really tiny one I have that fitted perfectly across one of the cavities of the half cylinder silicone mould. 


 

But I thought making 120 gr. of soap was not right, so I decided to make moulds for another couple of those mini impression mats.   


   


For all three of them I used the dry mica painting method:



Next time I will try to the other method, that is making the soap in two stages, first filling the concave areas of the impression mat with thick traced soap, and then placing that at the bottom of the mould and filling it up with the rest of the soap. The results of this method can be astounding, but I'm afraid I will have to exercise a lot more patience than I normally have, because I tend to ruin a lot of soap by unmoulding too early :-(  and I suspect you need to wait quite a bit to avoid leaving half the soap behind in the mat.... or maybe try to bypass the waiting by adding a fair bit of salt ;-) We'll see.

Anyway, here are the results of my attemps. The first one is very much in the Christmas spirit, scented with a blend of frankincense and myhrr essential oils and a bit of sweet orange to brighten it up (I'm not a huge fan of myhrr and like to tone it down). Coloured with activated charcoal and having the mat dry painted with gold mica, for me it just embodies the gifts presented to baby Jesus by the Three Wise Men.



The next one was coloured with lovely pink ultramarine, but I made the rookie mistake of including orange x10 in the blend, which of course turned the soap batter orange :P . But the next day it had morphed to a quite lovely salmon colour, so I'm fine with that, plus I think it's a good match for the antique silver mica I used on the mat.



And the third one is a more colourful one. I don't think it is a particularly good looking soap, but I'm happy because it meant I made peace with indigo. It is not the blue jeans blue I've always tried to achieve with indigo and failed miserably because the soap either turned an ugly dark grey or stained when used. This time I used indigo that I had been infusing in light olive oil for weeks. I knew it would not be the dark blue I've seen in other soaps and loved, but I quite like this hue and I already have a couple of projects in my mind where I will be using it. Btw, the line in the middle is not a mica line, but a very fine soap line made with leftover soap from the first one coloured with activated charcoal.
    

I feel the photos do not do justice to the Three Wise Men soap, but I have decided it will be my entry for this month's challenge because it's my personal favourite out of the three.*** 



So... It's a good thing I got up early this Sunday morning! Oh, the joys of time difference. 6:20 am my local time and I wake up to an email from Amy that my soap entry does not comply with the guidelines because it hasn't been made in a log or slab mold. With about half an hour left all I can do is hope for the tiny molds I made for the other impression mats, even though small, to be considered as such. So I change my entry to my salmon coloured soap, which I honestly have not thought of a name for yet. This is as much as I can do at the moment. Good luck everyone!

Thanks everyone! Every month I learn so much from you and I never cease to be amazed by all the talent out there.

Cheers!

Anna