Sunday, January 31, 2016

Experimenting

Trying to capture a Northern Lights feel in a soap is more difficult that I thought. I've been trying for some time without results that have been satisfying. I feel close but not there. I cut one of my attempts thinly and back lit it and it's not bad, but I think I need more green soap and less black and greener green soap. I thought about the idea of M&P and wondered if it might be useful, although when I've seen the Northern Lights, I haven't thought transparency as much as been fascinated with the shapes and curtain-like effect it can have.

At any rate, I have added M&P to CP soap only a few times with okay results but this time I blended melted M&P into CP batter, wondering if it would change the CP and make it more translucent. AN interesting experiment, to be sure, and it requires more attempts. I'm afraid both of my tries got very very hot in gel which may have altered my results. In the green one, it seems like the M&P precipitated out, to the bottom but I got an interesting rocky kind of look, which I like. In the other, I used an FO that accelerated more than I anticipated, probably because I had to soap fairly hot so I could blend in the M&P so I got this wad of blue and violet soap. I had been looking at pictures of the universe and wanted to get a gas cloud effect, not a gas blob effect, plus either there was a bit of separation or a couple blobs of M&P melted away. The soap got smoking hot! It's kind of ugly, the universe soap, which is unfair because the universe is stunning and I hope some universal force does not smite me for the misrepresentation. If I'm found dead in my house, smoking at the ears, you will know what happened and beware.








I did manage to make a very nice normal soap, but it's for a challenge and I shall post it later, plus I have to get decent pics of it.

Friday, January 22, 2016

Just a quick post

When you come across a beer named Wild Devil, you have to soap with it. Nothing original in the soap design but I liked how it mirrored the devil's horns.


Saturday, January 16, 2016

To continue the bird series....

I tried to make some Owl eyes because they are so intense. Unfortunately, the non-accelerating FO I used did accelerate (not really that surprising. It seems to happen all the time) which caused a fair amount of glopping. The eyes don't go all the way down because the batter was too thick but the effect overall is not too bad. One of my son's friends actually recognized them as owl eyes! That made me happy!




I may try again or I may try a couple feathers which have such beautiful patterns on them (in them?)

For our soap challenge, the B&W one, I opted for novel rather than skillful in terms of a pour and made a Jack Skelington, whom I love dearly.






And this is one of the most inspired soaps I have seen! Made by Cara Staab. Soap onthe left and inspiration photo on the right. LOVE IT.

http://www.soapmakingforum.com/showthread.php?t=58149&page=2


Thursday, January 14, 2016

Birds

I cannot recall what started my searches for colorful birds. That's not to say it wasn't a good or inspired idea. After all, I have not a clue what prompted me to make my first batch of soap but whatever it was, it lead me to an awful lot of fun. Looking at the numerous colors, forms, shades makes me stare at the screen almost as if catatonic, but it's really mesmerism. It seems impossible. How would it feel to be so beautiful, graceful, strong yet fragile? I'm sure they feel normal and like any old bird but little do they know....

It was not my best idea, perhaps, to turn to bird pictures for soap inspiration because anything I make will crumple under the scrutiny between the bird and the bar, but it was still worth the try.



You can see the dilemma, I'm sure. From the first, I wanted to make a more abstract soap, with the feel of the wings spread for flight and the incredible colors surrounded by the blur of green. Yes, I should take my pictures in real light instead of beneath the kitchen light, but it's been gray gray gray here and the light is extremely cold and bluish. I used Nurture's Mint Green for the background, which looks more lovely in real person and much more washed out in the picture. At first, I was happy with the feel of the swirl but the next day, all I could see was a crab. I will have to use the same technique to do a sea theme, I guess.

The other soap was intended to be very literal. I really wanted a soap version of the row of birds sitting on a branch. Mine looks, um, not literal. And the branch looks a bit like a piece of poo. My yellow batter was YELLOW but seems to have run and hidden behind some green, some green that went from a fresh spring day and mated with some pea soup. Bah. I wisely decreased the diameter of my swirl tool but unwisely did not decrease it enough. A bit too much, wouldn't you say? I may try again but with a much thinner tool and see if I can get just that bit of soap moving instead of what looks like Nutribullet version of the beauties' fine pates.

I did like the top of the first soap.