Beautiful World Soaps
Soaps in Stock
Honey/Oatmeal
Exfoliating Honey/Oatmeal
Brine Luxury Bar
Goat's Milk
Lavender with Aloe Vera
Coconut Milk With 100% Coconut oil
Activated Charcoal
Black Rose
Unscented Calendula with Aloe Vera
Chamomile
100% Vegan Soap
Carrot Puree
04/18/2022
This weeks' highlighted soap is Goat's Milk Soap made with made with Avocado, Coconut, Olive and Palm Oils. Additives are White Kaolin Clay, Madder Root, sugar and an essential oils blend that is a refreshing and definitely girly, floral scent. Water replacement with Goat's Milk. Ordinarily, $5 a bar, this week only you can purchase them for $4 each. Shipping is available. Sale ends this Saturday, April 23rd.
03/27/2022
A Giveaway!!
Who doesn't want to pamper their skin with all natural products? Now, you have a chance to do it for free!
In celebration of Spring, Beautiful World Soaps is having a giveaway. One lucky person is going to win 2 bars of their choice! Yes! You pick the ones you want! All you have to do is like this post and share PUBLICLY so I know you've done it.
A winner will be randomly chosen and anyone inside the US will have their winnings shipped free of charge.
The giveaway starts now, Sunday, March 27th and ends Wednesday the 30th at midnight.
The winner will be announced on Thursday the 31st.
Let's do it!!
03/15/2022
Soda Ash
Soap making is an exact science. The lye water and oils ratio need to be in the precisely correct amounts for the saponification process to take place and change to soap. The amounts and ratio changes according to the kinds of oils used. Every ingredient must be carefully weighed.
With all the weighing and putting through soap calculators, there are a few wildcards in this process. One is the dreaded soda ash. You may know soda ash as washing soda. It forms when unsaponified lye reacts to the carbon dioxide in air. It's completely harmless and some people like the look of it. It's easily steamed or washed off.
There are a few reasons soda ash can form. It's recommended that the lye water and oils be around 100 F when blended together to make a batter. Some soapers like to soap at cooler temperatures That's one way the ash can form. It can also form if soap batter is exposed to the air when left to harden or if the batter is too thin when poured into a mold. In the case of exposed soap, spraying with rubbing alcohol can help. Some experienced soapers think that discounting the water that's added to the lye can help prevent it.
In any case, soda ash is merely an aesthetic problem. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder! See the photo below. What do you think,
yea or nay?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Category
Contact the business
Telephone
Website
Address
Boston, MA