

Tutorials on soapmaking, bath fizzies, lotions and more
Filed Under: Personal Ramblings
Filed Under: Personal Ramblings
Stephanie says: Over 10 years ago I was in a boring job and was desperate for some creative challenges where I could use my hands. I took myself to the local art school but the pottery class I was interested in was closed. Hmm. The only thing left was a metalsmithing class. So I hammered my heart out and have never looked back. I still have what looks like a tin-can I forged from copper sitting on my jewelry bench. It reminds me how close I came to missing out on my true calling as a jeweler.
Funny, I kept my first bar of soap too – just for that very reason.
Filed Under: Personal Ramblings
Jess works in the Bramble Berry warehouse, pulling your orders. She also loves being creative and blending all kinds of fun fragrances. Her creativity doesn’t stop at cool fragrance blends, she also designed the wrappers below. We’re lucky that she likes to make creative soapy ideas with our products and shares the wealth with all of us.
The Red Rose fragrance blend Jess made up is comprised of English Rose, Sensual, and Cybilla Romance in equal parts. The rose has actual rose petals, non-bleeding red and (non-bleeding) merlot mica
The Black Heart fragrance blend; Moonlight Pomegranate, Sugar Plum Fairy in equal parts
Black heart has lavender buds and black oxide
Skulls were scented with Kentish Rain, Earth Musk, Grass Stain, White Lily Cybilla – she calls this ‘Fresh Grave‘. If you didn’t use a skull mold, you could probably call it “Fresh Turf” or “Musky Breeze” or “Dank Library” or something less deathlike for your soap.
Filed Under: Bramble Berry News
We were floored when The Saponfier results came out and readers for this industry magazine voted Bramble Berry the Best Supplier for 2008. Bramble Berry also won for Best Fragrance Oil Vendor and placed 3rd in the Best Essential Oil Vendor and Best Fixed Oils Vendor and 2nd for Best Soap Molds.
Thank you for the honor. Everyone at Bramble Berry is thrilled to have the joy of interacting with our friends and customers daily through this blog, our Twitter account, the Teach Soap Forum, MySpace and Facebook. We feel so thankful to have the trust and support of the industry.
Filed Under: Business Musings
Thanks to the Seattle Police Foundation, I spent half a day with members of the Seattle Police Department on their shooting range and training course. It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience with lots of leadership lessons. The four top leadership lessons I walked away with were:
4. Hire for Enthusiasm not Genius – Seattle Chief of Police R. Gil Kerlikowske (that’s him in the above photo) told me that the number one business advice he would give to any small business owner was to “Hire for enthusiasm not genius.” He went on to explain that you can teach skills, improve reflexes and make new neural pathways but ingrained attitudes and joyful enthusiasm are difficult to train.
The half-day training was an amazing experience. The Seattle Police Foundation does a full day training once a year for community members and supporters. If you’re interested in learning more, click here to be taken to their site to request information.
Filed Under: Personal Ramblings
I just got home from Seattle so my write up on the lessons I learned on the shooting range will have to wait until tomorrow morning. It was a wonderful day with lots to share … tomorrow.
Filed Under: Personal Ramblings
I’m not sure what shooting and leadership have to do with each other but I am going to find out today. I’m headed to the Seattle Police Department for an afternoon of leadership lessons from the front lines. Unsure of what to wear to a leadership academy on a shooting range, I have apparently picked the outfit all wrong (jeans, sensible but cute flats, a light pink t-shirt and a white cotton sweater). My (male) staff have been teasing me with tales of gun grease staining my sweater.
I’ll be back later tonight and am excited to share the leadership lessons with you (with hopefully some photos!)
Filed Under: Personal Ramblings
Filed Under: Melt & Pour Soap
The next installment in our Christmas gift project tutorial series are these appealing Snowflake soaps. I love how intricate this project looks. In reality, these soaps are quite simple thanks to the well designed mold. These adorable little soaps can be as cheap as 49¢ each to make.*
update: Now that the entire series is posted learn to make bath fizzies here, lotion here, and sugar scrub here.
Get the kit from Bramble Berry with all the ingredients to make this project. Choose from two great fragrance combinations. Traditional Christmas Forest & Cranberry Fig or a more modern Cinnamon Sugar & Fresh Snow.
Tools:
Microwave safe containers for melting soap
spoon for stirring
spray bottle with rubbing alcohol
M&P tool kits (optional – but they sure make it easier!)
Step 1 Cut up soap into cubes and place clear in one container and white in the other. Melt the soap in the microwave in short bursts until both clear and white are fully melted.
Step 2 Add soap safe glitter, Brilliant Blue color and fragrance or essential oil of choice to melted clear soap. Add fragrance to melted white soap. I like to use .25 – .5 ounces per pound of soap for a strong scent.
Note: Remember to dilute the LabColor before use! Learn how to dilute the LabColors here.
Step 3 Place one of the colors in the details of the snowflake design. I like to spray a layer of rubbing alcohol into the detail portion area, fill up my dropper or syringe and then gently flow the soap into the detail lattice. The alcohol helps the soap flow smoothly into all the crevices. Once it has set-up (usually just a couple of minutes) scrape away any soap that has overflowed outside of the design area with the dental pick tool in the tool kit or a dull butter knife. Because of the raised design, it’s easy to just scrape the back even with the edges to clean up the details.
Step 4 Spritz the design with rubbing alcohol. Pour other color in the mold – making sure the soap is not so hot that it will melt the detail soap already in there. The ideal temperature for pouring any of the Bramble Berry house bases for overpour is around 120 degrees.
Step 5 Allow to set-up for a few hours or overnight before popping them out of the mold.
If you’re giving these as gifts, the organza bags finish them off nicely or you can use a little bit of saran wrap and a heat gun to achieve professional looking soap at your own kitchen table. Print out your labels from our holiday label designs and you’ve got the perfect stocking stuffer or handmade gift.
* the fine print: to get to our 49¢ each price we factored in one mold, 2 pounds of clear, 2 pounds of white M&P soap base, 1/2 ounce glitter, 1 ounce of fragrance and 1/2 bottle of blue lab color. In reality we don’t think you would actually use that much color and glitter but just in case. 🙂
Filed Under: Personal Ramblings
Reusing your packaging
Many soap-makers have found the usefulness of packaging that can be used as molds in creating distinct shapes. My most unique was a 2 ounce bar shaped like a small pipe cutter created by filling the cavity of the tool’s packaging. I know many soapers using cat food dishes, soda bottles, potato chip cans and other “waste” packaging. The role of reused items for soaping is probably only limited by your imagination and your ability to disinfect and clean previously used items.
Getting the fragrance out of fragrance bottles
While many people have found ways to use or reuse found material in their soaping, it is often the products designed for making that wonderfully fragrant or oddly shaped creation that leaves us baffled when trying to reuse their packaging; in particular, the bottles that we all get our fragrance or essential oils in. For most of us, the bottles are too valuable to throw into the recycling bin and we’d really like to use the space, but the previous occupant just lingers on, a ghost of its former self.
The solution is, to pardon the pun, salt solution. I have rescued many a brown bottle with nothing more than Morton Salt from the pantry. I usually try to throw in some rock salt for scouring and that’s it. So what’s the salty secret? Old fashioned elbow grease – nothing more. Often, in order to clean glass, you must scrub it like last week’s lasagna casserole, but don’t worry, I won’t tell your mom it sat so long! Also, you must create an environment inside your bottles amenable to removing the oil clinging tightly to the glass. Water, as we all know, even with lots of warm suds just won’t remove all the smell from your brown, Boston rounds. The salts, besides providing the rough scouring action you’ll need, act as a place for the oil to attach once it is removed from the glass.
So what you will do is add a nice amount of Mortons’s and any rock salt you can find – usually a quarter inch in the bottom is enough. Or you can really splurge and try any of the Dead Sea Salts or Bath Salts Bramble Berry carries here. Then add enough warm (not hot) water to fill the bottle about one third fill. Too much water doesn’t allow the crashing action (think ocean waves during a current) and too little doesn’t lubricate the process. Do not add any sudsing agents or you’ll fill the bottle with bubbles that will only need to be removed for this to work. Next, put the cap on tightly and shake like a mad demon. Also, this process relies upon your ability to imagine you are one of those salt grains slamming about the bottle, crashing into every nook and cranny, and dragging those stubborn oil particles away from the glass. If you skip the imagination step, your bottle with not come clean, trust me.
Next, empty the bottles’ contents into your drain, or your next load of laundry (not the salt though), rinse the bottle and “poof,” all clean. This will clean your bottle as well as you’ll need to. You will probably smell a small amount of residual fragrance in the bottle, but it will be so tiny that any new fragrance added to it will easily overwhelm it with no risk of contamination.
The thing to remember when reusing your bottles or any other item is that sometimes you are limited in what you can do. For example, leftover organic scraps from the table can be fed to your worm bin, your compost, or just tossed into the neighbor’s yard and your old newspapers can be turned into paper mache Halloween masks, but your fragrance oil bottles should probably not be used to store water for your fallout shelter. Their best use will remain as storage for your soaping supplies so don’t even think of switching them out with your child’s broken Incredible Hulk thermos.
Next issue, how to make a dog sweater from your dryer lint…
Filed Under: Bramble Berry News
We were thrilled when the “Aging Backwards” host, Jackie Silver from Daytime fell in love with with our DIY Eye Shadow Kit. She liked it so much that she included it in a round-up of beauty products that help you “age backwards” if you have skin sensitivities. She suggested making the mineral eye shadow with your daughter for a great Mommy’n’Me activity. Jackie also featured the Crafty Couture DIY Perfume Kit, which allows you to customize a scent just for you and your preferences.
Thanks for the recognition, Aging Backwards and Jackie.
Filed Under: Lotion
For the next installment in the Holiday Gift Idea series, I will wow you with how easy it is to make your own lotion – from scratch! Of course, you can always purchase a pre-made lotion base and add your own fragrance. But by making your own lotion from scratch you can choose the ingredients and make it as luxurious or as economical as you like.
update: Now that the entire series is posted learn to make bath fizzies here, guest soap here, and sugar scrub here.
Tools:
Filed Under: Personal Ramblings
I’m having a great weekend thus far (and we’re only 4 hours into it!). Some of the things that have caught my attention this morning (besides the delicious breakfast of coffee and aged Gouda cheese from Quel Fromage)are:
Filed Under: Bramble Berry News
I just love their thoughts on crafting and agree. It’s an inexpensive and entertaining activity for the kiddos (as well as a fun and sugar-free Halloween activity).