How to Melt & Pour Soap - Make Foaming Hand or Castile Soap

Melt and pour soap is fun and easy, learn to make gifts for friends and family

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How to Melt & Pour Soap - Make Foaming Hand or Castile Soap

What You Will Learn!

  • How to Make 'Melt and Pour' Soap
  • How to Make Foaming Hand Soap
  • Making Your Own Bottle With Ready-Made Soap
  • Making Scented Foaming Soap With Essential Oils
  • How to Make Castile Soap
  • Preparing Soapmaking Supplies
  • Pouring and Curing the Soap
  • Making Liquid Castile Soap
  • How to Make Salted Soap
  • Making Melt-and-Pour Salted Soap

Description

Hi guys welcome to this course.  In this course you will learn  How to melt and pour soap and Making Foaming hand soap or castle soap. Because Melt and pour soap is the easiest method of making homemade soap. Because the soap base has already been made and prepared for you, you do not have to worry about working with lye, like you would with cold or hot process soap. It is fast and easy to prepare for both children and adults alike. Best of all, there are no curing times involved, and the soap is ready to use once it hardens!

Liquid and foaming hand soaps are easy to use and by far more hygienic than soap bars. They keep the bacteria at bay and prevent skin diseases. However, ready-made bottles can be expensive and bad for the environment. Making your own foaming hand soap is an easy way to save money in minutes

Salt may sound like it would dry out your skin, but it is actually very good for it! It helps pull out toxins, relax muscles, and reduce inflammation. The fine grains also make salt gently exfoliating. As such, it is unsurprising that salt has found its way into soap! There are lots of ways to make salted soap, but the melt-and-pour and re-batch methods are the easiest and safest ways because they require minimal measuring and don't use any lye. Once you know the basics of making salted soap, you can experiment with your own fragrances and variations!

Castile soap is a biodegradable soap made with olive oil, water and lye. It was invented in Aleppo and brought, by the crusaders, to the Castile region of Spain where it became popular. For centuries people have been using this gentle cleanser for everything from bathing skin and hair to washing clothes and floors. After making bars of Castile soap, you can use them in their solid form or blend them with water to create liquid soap. So let's start the course.

Who Should Attend!

  • Anyone can take this course
  • Anyone who interested in soap Making

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Tags

  • Soapmaking

Subscribers

21

Lectures

16

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