Monday, January 26, 2009

Short Weekend...

The custom tubes I wanted to make are finally done, due to calling upon a friend with a great table saw. I glued caps on the ends, and sanded the edges a bit. Then I was ready to go.
I started my first batch 11 PM. I was having a good time watching a movie with my wife, so started after that. This batch would remain a natural colour, for the outside of the pink grapefruit. When soap is ready to be poured, it thickens up like pudding, and you add your fragrance and mix well, while it is still pourable. This batch was going to start it's curing right in the bucket I made it in, as it would be hand moulded the next day.

Fast forward 12 hours, the soap has started setting. I weighed out 10 oz portions, then pressed it into the moulds to evenly cover the entire surface.

Now it was time to make the interior of the soap - this part would be coloured pink - the fragrance I used was 'Pink Grapefruit and Rosemary' - amazing fragrance. This batch would also have tiny pieces if white soap in it, to look like pulp, or seeds. This batch was going to be 75% of the capacity of the mould - about 25 lbs. Same recipe base was used, just bigger proportions. This batch was coloured with red iron oxide. I usually don't colour my soaps, so started with just a little, and added a bit at a time, until I was close to the colour I wanted. Then close to 'trace' which is when the soap is ready to pour, I added the fragrance, and 130 oz of soap shreds, and continued stirring until they were well incorporated.

I dipped a measuring cup into the soap, and poured it into each mould cavity - I had to clear off a desk to do this, as there were 24 of these moulds to fill. Pouring went well, and I had a couple of other moulds on hand in case I had more soap than I thought, which was the case. So now I'll have a few standard tubes of soap, and a silicone tray for sample size soaps. I covered the tubes and moulds with plastic food wrap. and a blanket, and let them sit overnight, finishing at 9:30 Saturday night. Each batch of soap takes me about 4 hours, from start to pouring into moulds.

Sunday afternoon I removed the blanket and wrap, and moved them into my bakery rack to continue to cure. I'll check tonight, they may be ready to be removed from the tubes and cut, to continue the curing process. I'll post some photos tonight.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

No Room in the Inn...

I spent my whole day today throwing things out, and cleaning up...
It was a bittersweet experience...
I'm also a photographer, and enjoyed the many years I made my own black & white prints. I packed up my enlarger a couple of years ago, and just this weekend, put aside all of my chemicals for disposal, developing trays will be gifted using my local freecycle, and all of the bits and pieces of my darkroom got packed up, to make room for my soap products. A large utility shelf unit was brought into the basement, and finally I have a decent place for my large mixing buckets, which were usually on my desk, or on the floor... then I took it one step further, and culled my files. Old negatives, photography product brochures (tons of them)!, photo lab info - all got recycled. It's made a considerable amount of free space in my file cabinet, but also I feel a little freer, trusting that if I need more product brochures, I'll be able to find them. I'm still taking photography jobs, but I'm scanning negatives and retouching photos on the computer, and emailing them to a lab, instead of enlarging them myself. If I get desperate to 'darkroom', perhaps Toronto Image Works still has their rental darkrooms available... I can get my 'fix' that way.
I'm a bit of a pack rat by nature - I love my stuff... my wife is the opposite - she operates very minimally, happy with less clutter... she avoids my side of the basement, except when she's out of scotch tape, or needs to use my computer... she's even challenged me to throw out my high school year books... I'm resisting, but I think it will happen inevitably...
I know how being organized is useful - when I'm ready to make a batch of soap, often my buckets are dirty (from the last batch) and I have to take them into the tub to wash them... then I go to weigh out my oils - oops, batteries in the scale are dead, but I can't get to the desk to find more, which my kids have already probably taken, and it goes on, and on, making simple tasks frustrating...
We'll see this this next batch of soap goes, I'm halfway there to making new molds - I'm using 3" ABS pipe, cut into 12" lengths, and then cut in half, to make half-round soaps... it's a new soap idea, having yet only a rich life in my head - it's time to make it happen.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

First Thoughts...

My name is Gord, and I've been making hand made, cold-process soap for about four years now. I'm quite happy with the range of products, and the labeling I've got worked out. November and December were busy months, with craft shows, so now it's time to build up my stock levels again, and look for ways to expand my market. I love doing craft shows - my extroverted nature thrives on the spontaneous interaction with folks, but I feel there are ways to sell my product other than craft shows.
This blog will serve as a journal of this process, and will hopefully help me keep the momentum up as I move forward.