This month's Soap
Challenge offered by Amy Worden of Great Cakes Soapworks is "Wood Grain Soaps".
Here are the guidelines for this month's challenge:
The goal of
this challenge is to get our soap to look like a natural wood grain. The
textures, colors, and feel of a piece of wood can vary from tree to tree, and
the look of the wood will also change depending on the finishes and stains, or
paint that is used on it.
Here are the Guidelines:1. Your soap must be made with cold process only featuring a wood grain technique. (The outer bark of the tree may also be part of your design, but the main focus should be the inside grain.)
2. You may use any type of mold, size, or shape for your soap.
3. You may submit your entry in ONE of the two categories: all-natural or
synthetic. In order to enter your soap in the all-natural category, it must not
contain any synthetic ingredients. No fragrance oils, micas, pigments, oxides
(including zinc oxide and titanium dioxide) or dyes. A list of ingredients as you would
list them on the label will be required for all entries in the all-natural
category. These may be listed in the caption or blog post that you link to, not
on the entry itself.
4. The photo you submit should have cut soap(s) from ONE batch only. Lighting
and color adjustments may be made to best represent what the soap looks like in
real life, but editing photos to alter the appearance of the soap is strictly
prohibited.
I thought this challenge would be a breeze to complete, boy was I wrong.
I decided I would like to make a soap that looked like weathered wood and started
searching for images on Google for pictures and found some good examples and
decided on these two images as my inspiration.
I wanted to do a spin swirl to
try and mimic the wood texture. The colors I chose are a grey mica, titanium dioxide
for the white, and a teal mica. I mixed
2 different fragrances from Bramble Berry, Woodland Elves and Vetyver.
After getting my soap to a very light trace, I mixed my colors and put
them into the bottles, I mixed a light grey and a darker gray and wanted just a
small amount of the white and teal for part of the design. Everything went really
well at first, the soap stayed very fluid for the pour, but when I actually
started turning the mold back and forth to get the wood texture look a bunch of
soap spilled out over the top of the mold, what a mess that was. Well I got
that cleaned up and then I pressed a wood grain texture mat onto the top of the
soap in the mold. Well there was a bunch of air bubbles under the mat and no
matter what I tried I could not get most of them smoothed out. When I unmolded
the soap the air holes looked awful so when the soap was hard enough to handle
I used my soap beveller and shaved off
the top of the soap, I love how it showed the wood type texture when I
shaved away the air bubble marks.
Staring to pour the different colors.
Finishing up the pouring of the colors.
Getting ready to spin the soap in the mold.
Cut Soap Bars
Cut Soap Bars
Cut Soap Bars