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Home Page | Posts tagged "Soap Challenges" ( Page 2)

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Apr17

April Spin Swirl Great Cakes Soapworks Challenge

Here is my spin swirl entry for April’s Great Cakes Soapworks challenge.
My entry is scented with orange, lime and patchouli essential oils to match the orange and green colouring.

This was a hard one for me, I like to try to do something a bit different when it comes to the challenges and to think outside the box; but I was really short on ideas. I had three attempts, and have decided to enter my second attempt.

I used a lard soap recipe as I find it traces fairly slowly.
Lard 40%
Olive Oil 20%
Sunflower Oil 20%
Coconut Oil 20%
Scented with 3% Orange, Lime and Patchouli EO
I coloured the layers with yellow iron oxide, dragon blood red mica (mixed with yellow to get orange) and olive green mica. I mixed up my powdered colourants with a dash of olive oil to make sure they would blend properly into the soap batter. (The last thing you want is loads of little spots where you have unblended colourant ruining your design). I only used a 3% superfat so the tiny amount of extra oil wouldn’t affect the final product.
I decided to use a lazy susan to help me spin my soap as I thought it would be easier to control. I glued the plastic soap mould onto the centre of the lazy susan with some blu tack to hold it in place. I didn’t want it to go flying mid spin! I also bought a small plastic tub to use as a mould as my big wooden log mould makes huge batches and the guidelines said we needed to be able to cut the soap in half to show the internal design so it had to be a double batch. I didn’t want to be overrun with millions of bars of soap!
I decided to do a column pour to fill my mould so I used an empty vitamin C tube and a facial serum tube that were about the same size to pour the batter over. Then, when there was a small amount of batter left, I drew a star shape on the top with an orange blob in the middle to look like the sun. I wanted to see how much the straight lines would curve as I spun the mould.
I then spun the mould. It is hard to tell whether you have spun it enough times as the top of the soap doesn’t move as much as the inside. It is a case of trial and error and fingers crossed that something looks nice inside. I am a control freak, so I find this very unnerving! I managed to succeed with only minimal splattering.
I left the soap to harden for a few days before unmoulding and cutting. I was really pleased with the inside of this one compared to the others, I felt like I achieved a wide range of patterns across the slab. I especially like the one that looks like little flames, and the ones that look like tree knots.
Amy’s instructions were to make a double thickness layer of soap and cut it in half to reveal the swirled pattern inside – here are mine:

My first go at this was pretty dismal. I used grey as a background colour instead of white and had too much grey compared to the orange and green colours, so it looked drab. The swirls weren’t very well formed either so I won’t bother uploading pictures of those.
I also had an attempt trying to ‘think outside the box’. I made some cardboard rings and inserted them into the soap batter after pouring the colours in stripes into the mould. The idea was that the card would guide the soap batter during spinning and turn the straight lines into concentric curves. It certainly looked different when I unmoulded and cut it, but I didn’t feel like it demonstrated the technique adequately. My original regular spin swirl had more life to it so that is the one I chose to enter.
I think the key to getting nice swirls with this technique is to keep your batter very fluid, so you need to work very quickly once you have started and not over mix your colourants into the batter.
As always the challenges push me to try new techniques that I wouldn’t otherwise have considered. Thank you Amy. I look forward to the challenge next month.

 

Mar20

Great Cakes Soapworks Challenge March

The challenge this month was to create a landscape in a log mould that didn’t contain any man made structures. This is quite difficult as many of the landscapes around me do contain man made structures. I decided to replicate this image of lavender fields as it is grown in Devon near to where I live. I also loved this photo as the vibrant purple from the lavender contrasts beautifully with the yellow and blue clouds in the skyline.

I put this second picture up as it captures the yellow colour of the soaps better.
The soap recipe I used traces at a medium speed and creates a hard bar that can be unmoulded fairly easily.
Palm Oil 40%
Olve Oil Pomace 30%
Sunflower Oil 10%
Lard 20%
I scented the bars with 3% lavender EO as it matched my theme.
I started by making an in the pot swirl with a mixture of purple and green batter (liquid soap dye and spirulina) which half filled the mould. I allowed this to harden for a day, then removed it from the mould and sliced it into sections to represent the lines between the rows of lavender bushes.
I used my soap loaf cutter from themouldsshop.co.uk to cut nice straight lines into my embeds. I would have really struggled without it!
I then mixed up another batch of batter to fill the rest of the mould. I divided it into five different unequal parts to complete the design. One part brown for the soil between the lavender rows (cocoa powder), one part green (spirulina) for the tree line, one part yellow (liquid dye) for the horizon, one part blue (liquid dye) for the sky and one part white (plain batter) for the sun coming through the clouds.
I had two attempts at this. The first attempt was made in a similar way, but I used mica to colour it. I wasn’t happy with the colour vibrancy and the brown lines in between the rows weren’t very distinct so I tried again with the liquid colourants.
Here is my first attempt.

 

Feb18

Great Cakes Soapworks DNA Helix Challenge

I recently discovered that Great Cakes Soapworks host a monthly soap challenge. There is a swirl technique that you are given instructions on how to achieve, then you are asked to take a photograph of your own personal attempt. All entrants are then asked to vote on which soap is their favourite.

 

 

My soap is sort of DNA themed. My original plan was to  make a completely grayscale soap, in tribute to one of my favourite scientists, Rosalind Franklin. Her x-ray crystallography images played a huge part in helping Watson and Crick work out the helical structure of DNA. (I think that’s more than enough science geekiness now)

Here is one of her images

Unfortunately, my soap didn’t look the way I wanted it to when I did it completely in greyscale so I added in a touch of pale blue/green mica to add a bit of extra interest.

I used a recipe that I  have found to be really slow to trace. It takes days to set hard, and wouldn’t be my ideal choice for functional soap, but it allows you ages to work on swirls, and the bars are still useable.

50% Lard
30% Olive Oil
20% Sunflower Oil

I scented with 3% English Rain Fragrance as I thought it went well with the blue and grey theme.

I added titanium dioxide to the whole batch to create a white base. Then I poured about a 2cm layer of that base into the bottom of the mould. I poured the remainder into three squeeze bottles, and used two different concentrations of activated charcoal and blue/green mica to dye the batter.

I squeezed the pale grey and blue in vertical stripes down the middle of the mould, then outlined the multi-coloured strip with the dark charcoal. I then used a skewer to streak horizontal lines in between the dark lines all down the mould. I then used a fatter skewer to drag the dark lines into the helix shape. (unfortunately I have no pictures of this as I was too busy trying to get the swirl right!)

Here are some more close ups of my entry, a slightly different interpretation of the swirl, but I incorporated all the key elements so I hope it is acceptable and I hope you like it. I will add some more images of the cut bars when the soap is hard enough to unmould.

 

 

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