At the beginning of the month, we had a Share Your Favorite Soaping Tip Contest. The tip could pertain to soap, bath bombs, lotions, or any other bath and beauty project. We received close to 400 comments, and I was so impressed with all the tips. I definitely learned some new tricks! If you’re looking for more informational posts, check out the Tips and Tricks category of the blog.
Many of the tips had similar themes including have fun, stay organized, safety first and don’t get discouraged. These tips made me smile, because they really identified what the DIY journey is all about. Creating should be fun! To make sure it’s fun, it’s crucial to stay safe and it also helps to be organized. Click here to read all the tips in the comment section.
Most frequent tips:
1. Have fun. Don’t forget that soapmaking should be a fun activity. If it’s stressing you out, take a deep breath and relax.
2. Stay organized. Keep your soaping area organized and thoroughly read over the instructions several times. This will help the entire process go smoothly.
3. Safety first. If you are making cold process soap, take proper lye safety precautions such as wearing goggles, long sleeves and soaping in an area with no children or pets nearby. Click here to learn more about lye safety.
4. Don’t get discouraged. We all have an occasional soaping mishap. If your batch doesn’t turn out perfectly, don’t get discouraged and quit. Your next batch will be better. =)
Soaping mishaps happen, but don’t get discouraged! Check out the Soap Behaving Badly and the Soapy Mess-Up Quick Guide to learn how to work through common problems.
There were so many great tips, it was hard to choose my favorites. Below are some of the tips that really stood out to me. Thanks to everybody who took the time to share a tip. The team and I had such a good time reading through them!
Tool Tips
“I know all of you probably have at least one of the reheatable bags that your oils come in from Brambleberry. I actually cut the top off across one of them to make it a open bag. It works perfectly for rebatching soap in and works even better for melting your waxes in. I use the double boiler method and it is an awesome way to melt things down in. So never never throw away. They are really useful for this purpose.” – Kristie
“To process images for water soluble paper so that you get the best, most vivid images into your soaps, select the image in Microsoft Word (or use any image editing program). Increase both color saturation and contrast, and then lower your brightness or exposure just a tiny bit (to counteract the increased contrast, which can wash out some of the subtleties in the image). This will ensure that the images underneath the clear layer of soap don’t look so “washed out” (so to speak).” – Vittoria
“My house is kept rather cold (thanks, hubby), which makes getting a good gel on my CP soap a challenge sometimes. My secret? A cheap pizza stone! I pop it in the oven at 170 while I make my soap, pull it a few minutes before I’m ready for it, then set my mold on the stone (usually I put a thin towel between the stone and mold), cover with a towel, and let it go. The heat is enough to encourage the gel, but it dissipates just at the right rate–not too fast, not too slow, so I get a perfect gel every time. I use a cheap, thin stone since I wouldn’t want to ruin a high end one, and the high end stones tend to hold their heat longer, which I don’t really want.” – Lindsey
“If you stamp your soaps and have a problem with get soap getting stuck in the stamp, place a sheet of plastic wrap over the soap before you stamp. The impression comes out fine and no soap gets on your stamp.” – Debbie
“For smaller volume soapers and hobbyists: I use those foldable & stackable cooling racks for cookies to cure my soap. They can be found 3/$10 and can fit about 5# worth of soap on each one. Plus, they are easy to carry if you are like me and have to cut and trim soap in one room cure it in another.” – Vicki
“A small shoe box is the perfect size for the Bramble Berry 10″ Silicone Mold. I like to stick my mold in the shoe box and put the lid on. It serves a dual purpose of making sure there is no bowing of the mold, and is a great insulator. Throw an extra towel on top and you get a good gel.” – Caitlin
“If you use freezer paper to line your molds, cut as many blanks at a time as you think you’ll need for several weeks. This is a tedious part of soap making, so I stack up about a dozen cut to size. Then all I have to do is fold and insert.” – Deborah
“You know those medicine cups that come packaged with children’s medicines? I don’t like just throwing them away, so I use them to mix mica with oil/glycerin and my fragrances with vanilla color stabilizer. If you don’t have a dropper, the medicine cups are great for measuring the fragrances because the milliliters are printed on the cups. Almost everybody has them piling up in their medicine cabinets.” – Madi
Fragrance/ Essential Oil Tips (for more tips, check out this post & this post)
“Have you ever had fragrance and essential oils dribble down the side of the bottle when you’re trying to measure out that last .5 oz? I did, until I thought about how I solved that same problem when pouring wine–use a “Drop Stop”! Its a round flexible disc of a heavy mylar material that you roll and stick into the bottle and it prevents any drips–you can really stop pouring at a drop! They are in most wine accessories aisles, I DO NOT own stock in them, I just love to use them because I got tired of wasting product and cleaning up a messy bottle!” – Regan
“Choose the FO/EO combination you would like to test and make sure to have a note card ready to record results. Using a pipette or dropper, drop the FO/EO one drop at a time onto the cotton square or cotton ball, making sure to record the amounts/drops used of each scent. Once you have achieved a satisfactory combination (and made sure the increments have been properly documented), put the cotton into a zip-lock baggie, seal it, attach the note card to the outside, and set it aside. Over the next few hours, or even days, you can periodically come back to the baggie to gauge the result. If you adjust the scent by adding more, or different oils, make sure you document each addition.” – Debi
“My favorite tip is a simple one…when you need to pour fragrances (and small amounts of oil) and don’t want to spill, pour it along a chop stick and it will go right into your container instead of dripping all over the place.” – Desiree
Prep Tips (for more tips, check out this post)
“When prepping and weighing oils and butters to create soap sometimes we get distracted and forget to add an oil or butter so I recommend: Gather all oils and butters and position them to the right side of your scale. After you are done with each oil or butter move it to the left of the scale. With this technique you will know for sure all your ingredients are in your soaping pot.” – Laurie
“I am always concerned to forget to add an oil when making CP soap and making my soap lye heavy. So I print a copy of the recipe. It make take a little longer, but I take out only one ingredient at a time when measuring. While my lye is cooling, I take out the first hard oil, measure it, check it off the recipe, and then I put it away immediately . I then take out the next one, weight it, mark it, and put it away. Then move on to soft oils while my hard oils are melting. Keeps my head clear and reduces clutter, which also helps avoid spilling accidents.” – Monika
“I lay down a large garbage bag on my kitchen table to measure my ingredients. This makes clean-up easy and protects my table. For my mixing with the lye, I plug my stick blender in an outlet next to my stovetop and mix there because I use the stove fan to take out any fumes.” – Andrea
Organization & Efficiency Tips (for more tips, check out this post)
“My tip: Keep a Sharpie marker & a Dry Erase marker on hand. I make several batches at a time, (not all are always the same size!), and can quickly grab a Dry Erase marker to mark pitchers of lye with the size mold it is for, or to quickly mark on any of my containers. After getting a batch in a mold, I grab the Sharpie and make notes on the essential oil bottle or on the fragrance oil bottle (A = accelerated, R = riced, etc) Then I can transfer that information to my notes later. Or leave it on larger bottles for easy reference during next use.” –Kimberly
“My tip is to keep track of the expiration dates on your oils. If you find that one of your oils is getting close to its expiration date use it up! Create a special recipe that will use that oil as the majority ingredient. Say your olive oil is about to expire. Make that the majority of your base oils then to balance out the recipe you can add coconut oil, palm kernel, cocoa butter, or shea butter.This will help your bottom line in the long run and you won’t be wasting any products. The worst thing to happen to any soaper is to spend money on gallons of oils and they expire before you get to use them!” – Alicia
“When I’m making a Taiwan or Mantra swirled or otherwise complicated soap, I increase the batter recipe a little to cover for soap lost to dividers, or if I misjudge the amount needed (better a little too much than not enough). I keep a silicone bar mold, such as Brambleberry’s 12 Bar Square Silicone Mold, ready to mold any unused soap into bars when I’m finished with the main soap. I keep track of the batch number so that I know what’s in it later when I use it for samples, embeds, or family soap. If I don’t find a need for it, I donate it with other saved soap scraps to Clean the World, a non-profit that rebatches soap into bars “that prevent millions of hygiene-related deaths each year.” – Janie
“My tip is so simple but it has helped me many times. I always place the fragrance oil and any additives I will be using inside of the mold I will be making that particular type of soap in. I have forgotten to add my fragrance oil, a clay or a some poppy seeds etc. into my soap at the appropriate times before and since I have started this simple trick I have not had it happen again.” – Lisa
“I hate to waste even a tiny bit of soap. After I’ve poured my mold and scraped as much of the batter from my pot as I can (the KitchenAid silicone spatula is my go-to), I let the pot sit and any leftover batter trace even further while I clean up. When it’s good and thick, I scrape the rest into a little pile on a piece of butcher paper. I let it cure with the rest of the batch, and that’s my own little “sample bar,” either as a sniff tester, or my own bar to use from that batch. Also makes washing the pot easier.” – Audrey
Clean-Up Tips (for more tips, check out this post)
“I spread out wax paper on my work area to keep the mess contained. Then I wipe up the containers with paper towels while they are still warm to get all of the wax out. Even just these 2 simple steps have saved me so much time cleaning things up.” – Amy
“I always use doggy pee pee pads to cover the counter so my kitchen counter top does not get ruined. When we first started out we used wax paper and quickly learned if you spill anything it tears through the paper. The doggy pads are thick and absorbent and can be reused.” – Peggy
“My biggest tip is for clean up, I bought several cotton tea towels. I wipe all my utensils and containers with the tea towels before leaving them to wash a couple days later. the towels remove the soap and dishes are easier to clean. I throw towels in wash and then they are ready to reuse. This saves on buying paper towels and washing items is a breeze.” – Joy
“Use old newspaper, magazines, or circulars to line your crafting space. It makes for a much faster clean-up, saves paper towels, and helps to quickly switch between crafting tasks.” – Kristen
“When making CP soap, I wait until the next day to clean my vessels and utensils. Saponified batter is so much easier to clean up than oily goop!” – Erika
Bath Bomb Tips (For more tips, check out this post)
“One of the best tips I ever heard about releasing bath bombs from the mold was to tap the outside of the mold with the back of a spoon all around the mold. It seems silly but it really does work. The bath bomb releases easily and stress free.” – Brittany
“Bonus tip when making bath bombs put any flowers or decorations in your mold first, then add your colorant into your spray bottle with your water (or in my case witch hazel ) it mixes in much easier.” – Candy
“For easy clean up after making body butters, mix a batch of bath bombs in the same bowl. Just be sure to add the body butter ingredients to the list of those for your bath bomb.” – Dawn
Melt and Pour Tips
“So when you clean your melt and pour cup, just let the soap dry first, and then peel it right off! Then I like to squish it into a ball, and no wasted soap-plus easy cleanup! You really don’t even have to wash it! Don’t wait too long, though, or else it won’t come out.” – Emmeline
“Use a crockpot for melt and pour! Use a crockpot for rebatching soap. I also use it to make liquid soap. The steady, even temperature makes melt and pour very easy.” –Maria
Thanks again to everybody who took the time to share a tip! I love how willing the soaping community is to help fellow soapers. If you didn’t get a chance to share one but would like to, feel free to leave your tip in the comment section below. =)
Shannon says
Hi, total newbie here. I followed an olive oil/ coconut oil/ goat milk basic cold process soap recipe and was confused about the refrigeration vs no refrigeration part. I refrigerated mine, and 24 hours later cut it and it looks like a mess
So now do I wait 4 weeks then test the PH to see if it’s worth saving? I’m so discouraged♀️ Olive oil is expensive!!
Kelsey with Bramble Berry says
What happened when you cut the soap? Also, you can pH test it after about 5 days. Learn how here: https://www.soapqueen.com/bath-and-body-tutorials/tips-and-tricks/troubleshooting-lye-heavy-soap/
If the soap is lye heavy, it can still be used as laundry soap.
Marroq Shop says
Hi All! Please help!
I have made a couple pf batches of soap, with no issues. I made the following recipe on Sunday and when I went to cut it yesterday, it cracked. I did the “zap test” and it’s lye heavy!!! I always run the recipe through the lye calculator and follow the measurements. I think my scale was off somehow, don’t know what happened?!? I want to save this batch, it was looking so pretty and smells so good- what can I do?
14 oz.
Canola Oil (Rapeseed)
11 oz.
Coconut Oil
4 oz.
Almond Oil (Sweet)
4 oz.
Grapeseed Oil
4.58 oz.
Lye (NaOH)
10.9 oz.
Water
Yield: 48.5 oz.
Kelsey with Bramble Berry says
I ran the recipe through our Lye Calculator and the amounts match, so I’m wondering if your scale may be off. You may check the directions for recalibrating your scale to see if that helps.
As for the batch now, we don’t recommend it on the skin because it can be irritating. You can use it for laundry soap though. This post talks more about that: https://www.soapqueen.com/bath-and-body-tutorials/tips-and-tricks/troubleshooting-lye-heavy-soap/
Lisa says
Please help, I have made several batches soap (approx 8) so for they all turned out fairly good. My last batch I ended up throwing out before it even hit the mold. I am not sure what happen here is my recipe. The only thing
I did different was I added the fragrance to the oil before mixing oils and lye mixture together. When I mixed it together I emulsified it for about 10 seconds I went mix it with the color and it was thick mess, it looked almost like oat meal. I couldn’t even get my emulsifier to mix it. Any ideas what i might have done wrong?
1oz beeswax
3 oz avacodo oil
3 oz Shea butter
8 oz unrefined coconut oil
8 oz olive oil
7 oz grape seed oil
9.9 goats milk
4.29 lye
2 oz fragrance
Thanks for your help!
Kelsey says
I’m thinking it’s the fragrance. If the fragrance accelerates, it can start to thicken the soap as soon as that lye is added. What fragrance are you using? It may perform better when added at trace.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Lisa says
Its Jamaican fruit I bought at a farmers market from a company called Sea Street I have used other scents from them before, but I have not used this particular scent and I have always added it at trace never before. Lesson learned always add at trace.
Kelsey says
Absolutely, that will definitely give you more time to work. This post has more tips on how to work with accelerating fragrances: http://www.soapqueen.com/bath-and-body-tutorials/tips-and-tricks/soap-behaving-badly/
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Lisa says
For cold press soap can you use refined coconut oil or does it have to be unrefined?
Kelsey says
You can use both, we use refined coconut oil. Learn more about the coconut oil we carry here: https://www.soapqueen.com/bath-and-body-tutorials/tips-and-tricks/sunday-night-spotlight-coconut-oil/
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Cristy says
I have learned a lot from your tips. Thanks for sharing.
Kelsey says
You’re welcome Cristy! The crafting community has some awesome advice to pass along for sure.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Sarah says
I made the most amazing soap disaster recently. I soaped at temperatures that were way too high. Thank you, impatience. It was supposed to be a swirl, one half white, the other red, colored with red Brazilian clay. I did not take into consideration the extra two tablespoons of water involved with dissolving the clay. Nor did I completely dissolve the clay. I was just so EAGER for a beautiful apple red and white soap fragranced with apple to start off my fall projects! Three and a half weeks later I had a really UGLY batch of soap, glycerin rivers, oil leaking out still, just plain scary. I decided to chop it it in mini food processor to rebatch. When I cut it up, pockets of undisolved clay came out. Ugh! Today I unfolded the melted, rebatched mess. It’s seriously ugly. Looks like head cheese, but I guess “brains” are pretty appropriate for Halloween season. This soap will not even be gifted. Live and learn: mix appropriately, cool appropriately. Impatience is NOT a soapers best friend.
Kelsey says
Oh no! I’ve had my impatient moments as well – I can’t tell you how many dents I’ve made in soap trying to unmold too early! Thanks for your tips Sarah. Patience definitely pays off when it comes to soaping.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Lisa says
My daughter likes body wash, I was told you melt down a bar of soap and water to turn it into a body wash. If this true how much water do I add?
Kelsey says
Hi Lisa!
Once solid soap is made, it will never fully turn liquid. Instead, it will turn into a soft consistency then re-harden. This is called rebatch soap! You can learn how to make it here: http://www.soapqueen.com/bath-and-body-tutorials/cold-process-soap/soap-queen-tv-presents-how-to-make-rebatch-soap-2/
To make body wash, we recommend starting with a liquid base. We have some great liquid soap bases you can customize with scent and color. You can find those here: https://www.brambleberry.com/Liquid-Bases-C15.aspx
We also have a recipe for Scrubby Body Wash you may like! I’ll link that below.
Easy Scrubby Body Wash DIY: https://www.soapqueen.com/bath-and-body-tutorials/scrubby-body-wash-diy/
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Lisa says
I have a question, when making goats milk soap is best to use part distilled water and part milk, or do use all goats milk?
Kelsey says
Hi Lisa!
It’s definitely personal preference! You can use part water and part goat milk, or 100% goat milk for the liquid. The more milk you add, the creamier the soap will feel. It can also make the bars a bit softer. If you prefer more firm bars, you can add a bit of water and some hard oils to the mix.
Read more about working with milk in soap here: http://www.soapqueen.com/bath-and-body-tutorials/tips-and-tricks/how-to-add-lye-to-milk-for-cold-process-soap/
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Lisa says
I need a little help i made a batch of soap and did not get hard, it is almost gooey I think I put to much olive oil in it. My question is there a way to fix this. I tested the PH it is fine. It has been 8 days since I made it. Please help.
Kelsey says
The fact that the pH level is normal is a good sign! How much oil, liquid and lye did you use in your recipe? Let me know and I’ll help you troubleshoot.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Lisa says
9 oz olive oil
7 0z coconut oil
6oz grape seed oil
2oz shea (unrefined)
1 0z bees wax
4.5 oz goats milk
3.5 oz lye
7.92 distilled water
Kelsey says
Thank you so much for your recipe Lisa! I think it may be the milk. Our Lye Calculator calls for 8.3 ounces of liquid total. With the addition of the 4.5 ounces of milk, it will be softer. Milk has extra fat that makes the soap softer, and the higher amount means it will take longer to evaporate. I would recommend letting that soap cure for 6-8 weeks. After that time it should harden up because the liquid will evaporate! For your next batch, you can reduce the water amount and add goat milk. So, that would be 4.5 ounces goat milk and 3.42 ounces of distilled water for 7.92 ounces of total liquid.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Lisa says
Thanks so much, I was wondering it that was what I did wrong. I will let it set and see what happens. Love your website and all your suggestions!
Kelsey says
You’re welcome Lisa!
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
No1 says
I am 2 weeks old at my expensive hobby, so I’m still working on making the kinds of mistakes that’ll grant me ‘experienced’ status. All my advice come from my other expensive hobby, shopping: restaurant supply stores- or GFS/ Sam’s/ Costco etc- have piles of things that come in handy: disposable gloves (the stupid, useless floppy ones AND the form fitted ones), 1 and 2 oz portion cups (if you realize you decluttered your kitchen cabinets 2 weeks before you discovered soaping, and read a cool tip on reusing medicine cups for mixing colorants), plus lids (if you mix more colorant that you need and have to store the excess), liquor bottle measured pour spouts (for dripping out the oil, one one- hundredth of a gram droplet at a time), lots of food service disposables that are sturdy-ish, because they are designed for restaurants- but cheap, because they are designed to be bought by the pallet load (but you only need 1 or 2 packs, woo!) knives, pans, molds in a multitude of sizes (their molds are actually called “cups of different sizes”, if you can’t find them and need to ask a worker where they are;)), miles of parchment paper, an impressively stocked scratch & dent discount section, humongo jugs of wine that’ll boil down to 4.2 drams by the time I’m done with them, metric tons of snacks to munch on while you enter percentages into your lye calculator, all kindsa stuff! Shopping is fun!! So is making soap- and doing 2 hobbies at once is 50% more efficient!! And here’s another awesome shopping tip!! Buy everything related to soapmaking from Brambleberry! Amazon doesn’t know or care if something speeds up trace in cold process or discolors ingredients. But Brambleberry’s free warnings show a concern for the customer that’s worth so much more than ‘free’ 2 day shipping (that you have to pay inflated prices on the products for anyway. Check it out!) So even if you already know that kind of stuff, it’s always best to support businesses that support you!
Kelsey says
Having helpful tools to soap with can definitely help the process go more smoothly! Thank you so much for your great tips. Also, thank you so much for the recommendation on our products! It means a lot to us.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Emmeline says
I love these soaping tips! I really like the medicine cup trick Madi said. And the doggy pee pad one from Peggy looks interesting and very useful! Thank you for mentioning my tip! I was really excited about that!
Emmeline
Kelsey says
Thanks for sharing your tip Emmeline, it’s a great one! Also, I love the puppy pee pad one too – I’m definitely going to try that one out.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Dianne says
What’s a “Dro-Stop”? Can you show a picture of one?
I just love this site!
Kelsey says
Hi Dianne!
Absolutely! You can find the wine drop stops on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=Wine+Drop+Stop&rh=i%3Aaps%2Ck%3AWine+Drop+Stop
I imagine the Drop Stops would also be available at a department store like Target or a kitchen supply store. I just love Regan’s tip, it’s so smart!
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
The Nova Studio says
I love that “have fun” is the #1 tip! So valuable!
Kelsey says
Me too! It’s so true.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Christine says
You should fix the typo about double “broiler” to double boiler. Otherwise somdbody will have a melted plastic mess or fire in their oven!
Also in that suggestion the word on should be one.
Kelsey says
Thanks so much for catching those Christine! I went ahead and updated the post.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Kristie says
I just keep learning more and more. I am happy you picked them out. I was having a hard time going through all of them. My favorite tip is the drop stop. Definitely looking into that one!
Kelsey says
The great thing about soaping is that there’s always something to learn or a new technique to try! Thanks for reading.
-Kelsey with Bramble Berry
Kristie says
That says it all! Great article and yes I read all of them. So much information.