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Working in the background

I am lurking on the website this week as promised. It’s still frustrating to me how well I can mess up loading pictures to the site so that is high on the list to fix this week in addition to getting back into the swing of our blog after my absence. Hopefully, I’ll be able to get all of these pictures I’m staring at out where you can enjoy too! Cross fingers for me and it’s ok to laugh at me breaking this site- I laugh the hardest sometimes. Luckily, I don’t plan to try to make a living by computer work 🙂 Although I might totally rock at computer & website demolition, actually……

Across the street from our booth at Houston Beer Festival, June 8, 2013. Awesome time with you guys!
Across the street from our booth at Houston Beer Festival, June 8, 2013. Awesome time with you guys!

As mentioned before, we were at the Houston Beer Festival this past weekend. We had a blast and met a ton of great people. Always enjoy getting out there with you guys, Houston, and this was a great time! I must send a shout out to Maximus, one of our local bands, for some great music too. You made even this pathetic dancer start moving and grooving with those songs! Keep it up boys! Here are the only two shots hubby managed to get of the festival for us. The white tent you can barely see with the Beer Soap sign (thanks again Bob!) is ours and the second picture is from the back of the tent looking out. Angie’s Bits o’Glass is there on the left and my pasty white legs are on our side to the right in this picture. (Angie, forgive me for posting your butt online without warning lol) It was a very busy but fun day for us. We thank you again everyone for such a great time. And some new jokes for me- hooray!
Looking out towards crowd from behind the booth at Houston Beer Festival, June 8, 2013. Lots of fun!
Looking out towards crowd from behind the booth at Houston Beer Festival, June 8, 2013. Lots of fun!

I must now go back to my behind the scenes work and try to load pictures around soaping sessions. This week I’m making more of our Texas Suds Beer Soaps, another round of plain pioneer soap, and some of the Honeysuckle too. I’m plotting the Ginger Peach bars but pushed them back a few days so I could make sure I can get the colors I’m shooting for. More details later and I hope these pictures cooperate with me. See you around the website!

Happy Washing!

Dorothy

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Researching and Decisions

I must admit I’ve been a bit of a nerd lately burying myself into research and planning. A few conversations with some great people at Donna’s and the Klein festival sent my geekiness into overdrive and derailed my typing time. Between bouts at the computer, stirring at the cauldron, overheating my stick blender, or burying myself in books at my desk, I lost track of blog time and I truly apologize. Please forgive my research bug and laugh at me a bit. Mind if I share a little of my research notes with you though?

I learned about a new-to-me allergy that has slowed some of my soaping over the last few weeks. A nice lady came by the booth who had a family member diagnosed with a formaldehyde allergy and they shared with me what they have been dealing with. I personally knew of formaldehyde in the use of embalming, some uses in dissolving or extracting ingredients, and in some cosmetic uses but they shared with me how widely it was used in everything- supposedly even in foods. That freaked me out on a level that was hard to describe even to hubby. We use food grade oils and herbs in our soaps to avoid a lot of nasties and I had been assured by our suppliers that none of these kinds of chemicals had been near our ingredients but I felt a need to really double check a few of them. I just had to know for sure, you know? We work hard to make sure that our soaps are safe for the whole family and the idea of how much this family was going through weighed on me. I’ve gotten almost all of my questions answered so far from the suppliers so I hope to be able to give that family an update soon. I’m also happy to say that our ingredients, whether we grow them ourselves or get them from our suppliers, are safe. The health and safety of all of our families are still our biggest concern. (Although kids vote that the size of the soap bubbles is their biggest concern!) I also need to thank our wonderful suppliers again for their patience in answering all of my questions.

I also sat down and took a hard look at the summer soap lines and how to approach them. We have been working with a growing request for us to keep both the unscented pioneer and olive oil soaps in stock year round now and I’m pushing those up in the to-do list. By the end of the month, they will stay on the regular stock list in the catalog and be there year-round. We also have two more men’s soaps that should roll out around that time. If these two keep going as well as they have, they might make the regular list too! I’m also moving up a fun color project to this week or next so I can have more excuses to play in the kitchen and post pictures. Another batch of Honeysuckle is brewing along with more of the Raspberry & Chocolate. As most of these will be cold process projects, everyone will have to wait until around the end of April or beginning of May to get their slice to take home. I really truly love the results we get from cold process soaping but have to admit my long, agonizing wait each time is torture…..

I again apologize for the delay in posting. And, yes, getting me to sit still this morning did involve coffee and chocolate for those who wondered. I must now return to the kitchen. The stick blender is raring to go for the day and the soap pots are all waiting. Hope your day works out well for you and we will see you out and about this month! We will definitely be at the Crawfish Festival this month and I’ll get more info updated for you on all the dates and places. More posts to follow soon- especially since I’ve figured out my phone’s voice recorder for keeping my blog post notes. Hooray for technology!

Happy Washing!
Dorothy

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Disappearing Soap

Where’d my soap go?!?!

I’ve heard that question before.  No, I’m not referring to how your favorite bar always seems to be snagged by the kids when you go to get clean or when you drop the soap in the shower.  (Probably a whole different blog and bunches of bad jokes right there.)  I’m referring to the question people get occasionally when they switch from the mass-produced detergent/beauty bars in the grocery store to a homemade soap.  Yes, handmade soaps behave differently in the shower- that’s part of why we love ’em!  Let me explain a little to hopefully solve one of your shower mysteries.

One of the perks of handmade soaps is that they retain their natural glycerin.  This is a wonderful thing for our skins!  The beauty/detergent bars you usually find in the stores have had their glycerin removed (most often to be reused in cosmetics, lotions, and the likes.)  Keeping that precious glycerin in the bar actually helps our skin.  It keeps us from drying out as badly and, for some people with skin allergies or problems, it has been shown to help to soothe those problems.  But what does that have to do with how long the bar of soap lasts in the shower?  That awesome glycerin also makes the bar dissolve quicker in running water.

Your handmade soaps will last much longer in the shower, bath, and next to your sinks if you don’t store it under running water.  I know that might sound a little obvious (who keeps their soap directly under the faucet?) but your shower stall might have its’ soap dish where water runs over it while you shower or water pools in it.  This can effectively “wash away” your soap before its time.  Keep your soaps in a soap dish that has a raised bottom or drains water off.  You don’t want your bar sitting in a pool of water- unless you are trying to achieve that old homestead “mush in a bucket soap” look.  You know, where you just reach in and scoop out a glop?  And I can tell you from personal experience that some of the soaps, especially the brown colored ones, just don’t look like something you might want rubbed all over your body once they’ve gone soft and mushy in a waterlogged soap dish.  If you just can’t picture what I’m talking about, drop me a line and I’ll send you a picture!

To recap, glycerin is good.  Running or pooling water is bad for soap, unless you’re doing science experiments with soap like we have.  I hope that this has solved one of your shower mysteries and given you a little smile along the way.  I am back off to see if my new soap scale has arrived yet and plot my next batch of soap.  Have a great weekend all and we will catch you next week.

Happy Washing!

Dorothy