Things You'll Need:
- Creative imagination
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Step 1
Beyond color and scent, there are a number of neat things you can add to your homemade soap. One of my favorites is honey, but there is also milk, glycerin, silk, shea butter, tomato paste, cocoa powder, fruit juice, dried herbs and flowers, finely chopped oatmeal, cornmeal (for an exfoliating bar), poppy seeds, finely ground coffee beans, beer and wine, berry seeds, Vitamin E capsule contents (2-3 per pound), seaweed, uncooked adzuki beans or almonds ground into a fine powder, and embedded objects. In cold process soapmaking, whisk in these additives after you've blended to an appropriate trace. For liquids, add at a light trace. For anything you want suspended evenly throughout the bar (oatmeal, seeds), add at a heavy trace or else the additive will sink to the bottom.
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Step 2
As far as milk goes, you can really use any type of milk—cow's, goat's, cream, buttermilk, half and half, plain yogurt mixed with water, even powdered milk. Use the milk directly in place of the water your recipe calls for. Whatever milk you use, freeze it before you use it. It should be “slushy” when added to the mixture. Milk soaps have a tendency to overheat, as do honey soaps.
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Step 3
To embed objects in your soap, put, say, a small plastic toy, rope for soap-on-a-rope, or similar item into the soap mold then pour the soap batter into the mold. Of course, this works best with see-through or glycerin soaps, which are usually “melt and pour” projects—not handmade cold processed soap.
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Step 4
When adding dried herbs or flowers, sprinkle them on top of soap just poured into the mold or stir them in with a whisk right before pouring into the mold. Most herbs will turn brown in your soap over time. Dried herbs often bleed a brown color out into the soap surrounding it as well. Some people find this unsightly, while others feel it is beautiful and a mark of the soap being handmade from natural ingredients.











