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Laundry Soap Part 2- Pictures!

After my last post, I was asked about trying to put up some pictures of our laundry soap making process.  As some of you know, I am not the most tech savvy person in my household nor am I the best photographer so it took longer than I really would like to admit to make this cooperate.  Please forgive my shortcomings as I attempt to show how we mix up our dry laundry soap batches.  As mentioned before, I take a fairly young soap and shred it.  It sits overnight (sometimes up to 2 days) to dry a little on the rack and then I take over a kitchen counter.

Making dry laundry soap
Making dry laundry soap

The bowl in front has shredded soap and behind it to the left is the washing soda and borax that we add to ours.  (Like our recycled washing soda container there- reduce, reuse, recycle, right?)  That food processor was a great buy that is still kicking after all the abuse it has received.  To the right is my favorite soaping pot with a plastic storage tub behind it.  I prefer towels under my workspace for something like this because it is so easy to clean up after!

Into the mixer goes one cup each of the soap shreds, washing soda, and borax.  I give it a few spins to mix and add in any fragrances we might want at that time.  Sometimes we use none at all, but our favorite is a clean laundry scent.  Go figure, huh?  If you are creating this at home, I will pass the same warning to you as my teacher gave me: let the bowl sit for a minute before you pop open the top!  As you mix these in the mixer, they will give off some powdery residue that you really, really don’t want to breathe or spread around your workspace.  Once the dust settles, the mix is ready to go into the big soap pot.

Dry laundry soap mixed up

After all of the shredded soap has been mixed up and everything has been poured into the big soap pot, I usually will give one or two more stirs in the pot just to make sure all is combined.  We will also adjust the scent as needed.  After it passes inspection all that is left is to place it into buckets for storage.  In this run, I made about three buckets full and we should be set on laundry soap for awhile.  It really does only take about one scoop for our laundry.

Laundry soap into the pot

The scoop in the picture below is just a regular coffe scooper- you might find them in your local dollar stores.  I got mine there over two years ago.  My soap teacher found these buckets in Home Depot and they have been the best for laundry soaps!  (Anna, have I told you lately you rock?)  That faded green thing in the pictures?  I confess that I still prefer to hand shred my soaps and I wear my old gardening glove while doing it so I don’t take off any more chucks of my thumb while I’m rocking out.  Shredding soap is great for thinking time but can be hazardous if you’re not careful or dancing around too much.  Time involved?  Not counting the shredding soap part, you can whip this up and clean the room back within an hour for a batch like this.  Want to try but don’t want to worry about shredding the soap?  We regularly make the laundry soap bases and sell it shredded for you.  You only have to decide which soap base to play with in your kitchen.

Finished laundry soap

Hope you enjoyed my little attempt at pictures here and that it might make you realize just how easy it can be.  Feel free to shoot me any questions you have and I’ll try to answer here on the blog or to your email directly.  Don’t forget you can find our little Facebook page too and catch us there!

Happy Washing!

Dorothy

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Laundry soap and an apology

Laundry Soap Shreds
Shredded soap for homemade laundry soap

I admit I’ve been pretty quiet here on the blog lately and felt I owed an apology and explanation.  I haven’t dropped off the face of the planet- promise!  Summer gets pretty crazy around here between soaping, brainstorming with customers for fall gift projects, playing with a new soaping oil, and the youngsters off of school.  Please forgive me for the less frequent postings in these summer months but I’m hoping that we’ll all be happy with the pay off here soon!  We’ve got quite a few varieties working their way off the curing racks and some great ideas for the soaps to be whipped up next.  Yes, Herbert, even another round of beer soap with your name on it!

I’ve been asked a few times about how we make our laundry soap around here so I’m hoping to make someone’s day today.  Ours is pretty simple and you are welcome to whip up some of your own!  I just checked on my soap shreds again so I could snap a picture or two for you and placed them back onto the drying racks.  They should be ready to mix up by tomorrow.

I start by making a plain 100% coconut or lard soap, depending on what I’m looking for in the final mix.  After it has been soaped up and molded for 24 hours, I pop the soap out of the mold and cut it into large bars.  The bars rest for anywhere from 24 hours to three days before I shred them down.  I find the younger the soap, the easier it shreds.  These shreds go back on the rack for one to three days to dry out a bit more.  Once they’re where I want them, they get tossed into the soaping mixer and go for a quick spin.   (I learned from personal experience to keep a separate blender and mixer for soap stuff- soap still doesn’t taste good!)  The soap shreds get washing soda and borax mixed in; that’s it, unless you add a little fragrance when mixing it all together.  Everything gets placed into a bucket that sits on the washing machine.  How easy can you get, right?  It only takes us about a teaspoon to tablespoon to wash up our clothes- even the very muddy ones my kids have brought to me lately.  Do you have a favorite way to make your laundry soap or have you even tried before?  It was kind of intimidating at first, like soapmaking, but it’s a lot of fun!

Happy Washing!

Dorothy

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Texas Pioneer “Kids”

Texas Pioneer Kids CHA Donation
Texas Pioneer Kids CHA Donation- “It’s a Jungle In There” was created with my child for local fundraiser auction. She designed and I followed her orders. Fun times!

I have had a few questions about our “kids” line and decided to add our explanation to our blog to make it easier.  At this current posting time, we do not have a line of products that are designed for kids only.  All of our soaps, unless specifically marked on the package, are safe for all use on ages.  That means that as long as you only use it externally (on your skin only, please don’t eat my soaps) the entire family may use any soaps.  We will occasionally pour some soaps up into fun shapes or themes but we’re not ready yet for a kid’s only line.

What then IS the Texas Pioneer “Kids” label for?  Soaps created with my children for local donations, in short.  The nature of cold process soap making is not child friendly but my kids seem to love helping my mad scientist tendencies.  The soaping bug has bitten them also, I’m afraid.  They get to occasionally design their own soaps from start to finish and those become the “Kids” projects.  They will pick a melt and pour base, scents, colors, additives, and any mold they desire.  We work together on their projects but it is pretty much their soap.  I can only claim supervisor role as I try to make sure everyone follows safety procedures while cooking and the results are safe for use.  There are some fun and interesting results when the kids get in the kitchen!

We try in our family to teach our children to appreciate what they have and to give back to their community.  We have tied this to letting them have a creative expression in their soapmaking and then sharing it with others.  The “Kids” soap line is almost entirely donated to local charitable groups.  We enjoy spending time together in the kitchen, mixing up something fun, and making memories they can pass on to their future kids.  They select a bar or two to keep out of the batch as a keepsake and then the rest are made into gift sets for charitable fundraisers or we deliver the bars to a local charity or worthy organization.  I am working on finding a local nursing home or other ideas of places who might enjoy these.  Do you have any ideas?  I would love to hear them as the kids have summer soaping plans!

I hope this has helped clear the confusion and not created more.  I must now get back to the soap pot.  Another busy week is ahead!

Happy Washing!

Dorothy