Cold pressed soaps? Or, Melt and pour soaps? Which is better?? - is there a market for organic soaps
I began to make and my own line of homemade soaps design, but I can not say which is better ... Cold-pressed or melt and pour. Even if someone the best recipes for all?
I know it takes a lot longer to heal "as the others, but the only difference? Does it make sense, cold pressed soap?
Also, I wonder if anyone knows of recipes for all natural or organic, or Web sites you can find the ingredients? This is the kind of market I am looking forward to .. Focus
Monday, January 25, 2010
Is There A Market For Organic Soaps Cold Pressed Soaps? Or, Melt And Pour Soaps? Which Is Better??
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The two soaps are very good, depends on what exactly you want your soap on what type you prefer.
ReplyDeleteGlycerine is just that. Basically, glycerine soap from glycerine soaps made of the cooling process is based. It melts at a temperature low enough and healed so there is no waiting period, and is usually presented as a bar of beauty.
http://www.eaudrey.com/glycerin.htm
http://www.teachsoap.com/recipes.html
With the cold process soap, you can change all the ingredients in the soap and keeps all the glycerin. This is the bleach, oil and water mixed together and stirred until a trace. Then poured into molds and left at least 24 hours to install. Then this soap will be left to "cure" for a few weeks. People have different opinions about the maturation period, which increased from 3 weeks to 6 weeks. Personally, I let mine cure for 8 weeks to make sure the bleach is no longer active. Most people believe that soap, "you do not know, you can not do without the use of detergent. With the cold processSoap to control what goes into the soap ... Coconut oil is a nice soft bubbles Vegetable oil is a major soap bubbles can be increased, which add additional oil resources to the runway, many, many things you can do with soap and cold.
When you add in the search for natural herbs, your soaps, you go to your health food store and look at their herbs and roots. The variety is overwhelming. I suggest you get a book about the healing power of herbs and roots, for example, you do not want to add Feverfew soap for someone with hay fever. It is essential to investigate the essential oils and their healing effect. While in the health food store, talk to people who work, are generally well to give information or may point the direction of a particular book presents the information you need.
A good place for your cold process soap start is this website:
http://members.aol.com/oelaineo/soapmaki ...
This is the websitea variety of information when I began to make special soaps. The recipes here are fantastic.
Search Recipes and handmade soap, you'll be surprised how many other websites out there on this subject. Here is another good site for you to look at:
ttp: / / www.soapcrafters.com / makebase.htm
You want to read a variety of information on the manufacture of soap before you try to start marketing your product. I suggest you consult your local library and read books by Sandy Maine, it is a soap-maker extraordinary and wonderful, full of cookbooks.
Here is a link to your website:
http://www.sunfeather.com/
One last thing I would add is packaging. The appearance of your finished product or make or break. You want your soap is a lot of attention. Nice sale package. Even if you sell in craft fairs, etc. where you in contact with the public to a product, talk to potential customers about your product, give them a small token to use, give them a card to visit see SEAddress from your enthuasim and passion for selling what you do and help you, your product, too.