Make Our Own Natural Soap, Its Fun And Easy

If you’re looking for a new way to express your creativity, be sure to try making your own natural soap. It can be as easy as “melt and pour,” or try more advanced methods of mixing fat, lye and water. You are sure to enjoy experimenting with fragrances, essential oils, herbs and colors.

Melt and pour is easy, and safe enough for kids. Some of the soap bases you can try are goat milk, honey, glycerin, olive & aloe, oatmeal or shea butter. There are some others as well, and each of the bases has different qualities. Try a few to choose the ones you like best.

To make a bar soap, just melt the soap base completely, stirring frequently. Add your desired fragrances, colors, or essential oils. Pour the soap into the molds and let it cool. If you get something that’s not quite what you expected, you can re-melt and try again!

For a more advanced creative process, you can make soap with fat, water, and lye. This method requires a little more equipment, time and knowledge. Safety first: Keep in mind that lye is a caustic agent and requires special handling. Always use eye protection and rubber gloves when handling it, and don’t let it touch your skin or clothing. Also, lye will damage aluminum and Formica, so keep it off table tops and counters. There are many great sources that describe this process in more detail. Just search the Internet for “make natural soap.”

Many people choose to make bar soap for different reasons. Some people do it to save money. Those fancy soaps that look and smell pretty as well as soften your skin get to be rather expensive. Others make a business out of it.

It is environmentally friendly to make natural soap at home instead of buying soap from the store that was made in a pollution creating soap factory. Back before WWI people used to make soap at home from the fats left over from cooking. At that time, they used to buy cans of lye to make bar soap. Prior to that, people made lye from wood ashes.

The movement toward more sustainable living has some healthy side effects as well. Since our skin is the largest organ of the body, taking care of it has become more important. One of the benefits of making natural soaps is that you can control what goes into them. If you are allergic to Shea Butter, just use oatmeal instead. If you are a vegetarian, there are soaps you can make out of vegetable fats instead of animal fats.

It’s so easy, fun, healthy and economical to make your own natural soap. You’ll expand your creativity and help the environment. Make exactly what you want and don’t be afraid to experiment. There are many easy soap-making recipes available. Make it a family project and have fun together. Anyone can do it!

Jen Hopkins maintains websites about acrylic nail care, and make soap at home. If you want to contact her, you can use the contact form at one of her sites.

www.archery-info.net

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