Wednesday, October 23, 2013

The Best Gift Ideas for Men for Christmas, Birthdays, Father's Day, or Weddings - Homemade Beer Soaps Made With Real Beer!

Awesome Beer Gift Set for Men (Vegan)


At Ginger Grey Soaps, we make some of the best soaps you can find, made with high quality skin nourishing ingedients.  We want them to not only be functional, but to smell and look awesome and they make the perfect gift!  Who doesn't like or use soap? Just in time for the holidays, we've listed our handmade beer soap set made with real high quality beer and vegan oils.  They're great for not only men, but women as well, or any beer lover!  We have the coolest set of soaps made with 3 amazing beers: Killian's Irish Red, Guinness, and Heineken.  They have been made to reflect and look like the beers themselves and to smell amazing.  Beer soaps lather up extra wonderfully as well!


 Why use beer soap?  
Hops, an ingredient found in beer, is known to soothe irritated skin, and contains polyphenols which act as an antibacterial agent. Beer also contains skin-softening amino acids and contributes to an extra fluffy lather.


One full bottle of real beer goes into each batch of beer soap.  We use high quality oils and all natural ingredients, making for one awesome bar of soap.  You'll never want to go back to store-bought soap once you try ours.  We also add unrefined shea butter to our special recipe, leaving your skin clean and soft with no drying residue.

 Each is packaged in a clear protective soap box, making it perfect for gift giving.  Each has a wonderful and unique scent that men or women would love.  Can't figure out what gift to get for that someone special?  We've got the perfect solution.  Try some for yourself too and you'll be hooked!

Check out our Homemade Beer Gift Set on our website Ginger Grey Soaps

You can buy each soap individually as well:

or browse our extensive selection of

Keep checking back, because we're always making something new!

Thanks for stopping by!

Melissa (soap maker)


Also on Etsy









Friday, September 13, 2013

Fall Scented Homemade Luxury Shea Butter Soaps



 This is one of our new luxury shea butter soaps, Cinnamon Swirl.  Breathe in the aroma of fresh baked buttery cinnamon rolls and the sweet scent of sweet drizzled icing. This delicious cinnamon bun scented handmade shea butter soap has real swirls of ground cinnamon throughout, which add mild exfoliation and beauty.
 This one smells amazing!  Pumpkin Spice  has a sweet scent of freshly baked pumpkin pie, with the perfect touch of spicy cinnamon and cloves. Sweet sugary maple adds the finishing touch to this fabulous fall scented shea butter soap. Real pumpkin puree was blended in which is rich in skin-loving vitamins, and it's topped with a shimmer of copper sparkly mica for an elegant touch.

This is a classic, sweet vanilla scented homemade soap with a touch of elegance.  Our Vanilla Bean soap is handmade with skin nourishing olive oil and shea butter with real Madagascar vanilla beans added throughout and a light sprinkling of poppy seeds making it simple, but beautiful. It has a rich and creamy lather, as do all of our shea butter soaps that will leave your skin smelling yummy, clean, and soft!


Just when you thought it couldn't get much better, we discovered Almond Biscotti.  This scent is absolutely amazing and smells decadent!  It's a yummy blend of toasted almonds, sweet cake flour and drizzled chocolate, that will leave you wanting more. We've also added ground almonds which add great exfoliation, making this a luxurious and long-lasting hand soap or an exfoliating body soap.  You'll love it!
If you can't decide on just one, we have the perfect solution.  You can get all four of these all natural homemade luxury shea butter soaps in our 4 pack at a discount, and get flat rate shipping, making it a great bargain.  Enjoy the lovely and delicious scents of fall!

Melissa



Our New and Old Website Designs for Our Homemade Luxury Soap Store - Ginger Grey Soaps

 Ginger Grey Soaps 
Online Store


This was our first design of our handmade soap store.  We use Big Cartel and like how it's not too hard to customize the templates they have.  I wish there were more templates to use, but so far I like it and I like their monthly pricing compared to Etsy which can get pretty pricey the more you sell.  At first I really liked the black background I chose and the collage of pictures but as time went on, I thought we needed to brighten it up a bit and ditch the black.  It was too dark.  I also didn't like how all of the links were in long columns on the bottom of the page and the top only showcased 2 of my page categories and not all of them.  I thought that might be confusing to buyers who may not realize we had more than two categories, unless they scrolled to the bottom.


This was our second design.  I liked this better, as it was brighter and more cheery and the product categories were in a column on the side which made it easier to navigate.  At first, I really liked the brighter choice of colors and the flower at the top, but it began to wear on me.  It just wasn't working and I saw another website online that had a slideshow on the home page and it really caught my attention.  I really liked how you could showcase your favorite products with text, at all times instead of a bunch of random pics like I had in this design.  So, I was off to change it again. 
 

This time, I purchased a template design by Tonka Park which was very affordable and I loved the slideshow design they had. It's specifically for a Big Cartel store.  I thought it would be fairly easy to customize it, but there wasn't a whole lot I could do with the basic layout once I purchased it.  I had to customize it a ton to get the look I wanted.  Either I could pay them to do the customizations or I could figure it out myself and learn a lot in the process.  I chose the latter and did tons of Google searching and learned how to customize the CSS and html portions of the site and really make it my own.  It was a lot of work, but I have some new skills!  So, I currently like the new look of the store much better than the previous ones.  It's bright and cheery and immediately showcases our products.  However, I'm sure there will be more tweaking in the future as we continue to grow and change.  What do you think of our new store?  Go check it out at www.gingergreysoaps.com .  I'd love to hear what you think and how user friendly it is.  Thanks for stopping by!

Melissa

also on Etsy


Monday, September 9, 2013

Making All Natural Chamomile Tea and Oatmeal Unscented Shea Butter Soap with the Hot Process Method

All Natural Chamomile and Oatmeal 
Unscented Shea Butter Soap



 The first thing I did was mix my lye and water together in a container and let it sit while I measured my oils and put them in the crockpot which was on High.  With this recipe I mixed in chamomile powder in with my oils in the crockpot and stick blended it together and let it sit about 10 minutes to sort of steep.  (I have a green tea soap that I make differently where I used green tea bags and brew them in my water and let it cool.  Then I mix in my tea with my lye.)  With this recipe I used chamomile powder instead of tea bags and I like the results.  It smelled like chamomile tea too, but very faintly.

  After my chamomile hasdsteeped in my oils, I added my lye water and stick blended to a light trace.  I scraped down the sides of the crockpot so I don't get overcooked bits in my soap and turned the crockpot to Low for the remainder of the cook.  I accidentally made a huge batch with this one and had two crockpots both of Chamomile and Oatmeal soap, so I have a ton of it, hence the black and white crockpots. 
 My crockpots cook slightly different.  One gets hotter than the other and one of them likes to do a lot of the cooking on one side.  A lot of people say not to stir your hot process soap.  If I did that, my soap would overcook and dry out on one side while not being cooked on the other.  I stir my soap every now and then and when I see it getting really cooked on one side (like in the picture above), or about to bubble over.  You don't want that to happen!  I find that when I stir it, it speeds up the cooking process because it's cooking more evenly and the heat is evenly distributed.  I don't have problems with big overcooked bits of soap this way either or my soap getting dried out and crumbly.  Just make sure that when you stir, you scrape down the sides really well and in the bottom corners of the crockpot.  I get overcooked bits there if I don't scrape all the way to the bottom and corners when I stir.

 With this soap, the soap separated into an oily mess unlike most of my regular soaps during cooking.  So far, I've found this to happen when I make tea and beer soaps and when I used pureed cucumber in my soap too.  It's fairly simple to fix.  If you know your soap is done cooking, but it's separated (like in the picture above), you just need to stick blend it back together.  This is a little tricky to do because it's thicker and harder to stick blend than at the beginning when you mixed the lye water and oils.  So, I find that I have to sort of swirl my stick blender very vigorously while stick blending to get it to incorporate.  It takes a bit of muscle, but it works. 
 This is after I've started to stick blend it.  You can see, it's not so oily and separated.
 It's getting much thicker now and becoming like the mashed potato consistency it's supposed to be.
 I continued to cook it just a bit more to make sure there wasn't any raw soap left.  It looked good to me!
 Now, I took my crockpot liner out of the metal part to help it cool faster and made sure to turn my crockpot off since I was done.  Here, I'm adding my colloidal oatmeal and my unrefined shea butter, which leaves the shea butter unsaponified since it's added after the cook and makes the soap super awesome feeling on your skin.  My skin is left so soft and I don't need to use lotion anymore.  The oatmeal makes the lather super rich and creamy and adds exfoliation, which I love in soap, especially hand or facial soap.  I love oatmeal soaps on my babies too and especially unscented soaps since my daughter has really sensitive skin.
 The soap turned very dark brown rather quickly as it was cooling. 
 It was interesting though since I had two crockpots going of the exact same soap, one was much darker than the other.  The crockpot that cooks hotter had darker brown soap than the other one.
 I've found that the only way I can get toppings to stick on my hot process soap (because it's not liquid like cold process is), I spray the top of my soap with distilled water.  This gets the top of the soap sticky like glue, and then I can sprinkle my toppings on.  I usually pat it down just to make sure it all sticks.
 As the soap cooled, it lightened significantly to a beautiful beige color which was more of what I was going for anyways.
 Here, my bars are sliced the next day and left on a baking sheet covered with wax paper to dry out more for the next several days.  It doesn't take too long for them to harden up. 
If I really need to speed things up, I leave them in front of our box fan overnight and they get hard really quick.  I love hot process soap because I don't have to wait 4 to 6 weeks or longer for my soaps to cure.  I have awesome soap right away.  Don't forget after you're done making soap to scrape out your crockpot really good and your mixing spoons.  I usually get a couple of good size hands soaps this way and you don't want to waste it.  You can use these right away to see how your soaps feel on your skin.  All of the soaps are immediately usable once it cools and isn't caustic at all.  It's just best to let the bars harden a bit so they last longer is all.


Here is the finished soap.  Looks good enough to eat and it smells like an English breakfast!  Although it's unscented (no added scent), it does have a faint smell of chamomile tea and oatmeal and is rather pleasant.  It feels amazing on your skin and is one of my personal favorites, especially for my daughter's sensitive skin.

It's available for purchase at the link below:

Thanks for checking out our post and hope you enjoyed it!

Melissa

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Luxurious Shea Butter Soaps - Handmade to Nourish Your Skin and Delight Your Senses by Ginger Grey Soaps

Handmade Luxury Soap


We just wanted to share our latest video showcasing lots of our new luxury shea butter soaps we now have available on our website www.gingergreysoaps.com  We have soaps for men and women and scents children would love.  All are specially crafted to nourish your skin while delighting your senses and are rustic and beautiful in design.  We hope you enjoy them as much as we do!

Thanks for stopping by!
Melissa
Ginger Grey Soaps

Monday, August 26, 2013

Why Use Homemade Soap Instead of Soap From the Store?

 Homemade Luxury Soap


Why buy homemade soap if you can just purchase the soap at the store for much cheaper?  Well, most so-called soaps at the store are synthetic detergent bars or "beauty bars" and are full of harsh chemicals that strip your skin of their natural oils, leaving it itchy and dry.  Then you need lotion and other products to fix the problem created by a harsh soap in the first place.  A lot of the big name soap companies out there try to get you to believe their soaps are safe and natural for your skin, but if you read the list of ingredients, you'll see it's a whole different story.

To make real soap, you only need 3 ingredients: lye, water, and a fat (oils, butters, etc.) which will leave you with soap that has it's natural glycerin left intact.  Commercial soap makers remove most of the glycerin from their soaps and sell it to be used in lotions and other beauty products.  It's a great financial move for them, but not good for the safety of the customer.  Then they add synthetic chemicals to make up for their inferior and harsh product to make it lather more and moisturize, etc.  You can look up most any ingredient of concern, to find out the safety of it by going to the Environmental Working Group's Skin Deep Database and reading more about the potential hazards.  Here is a list of some of the ingredients from a popular soap company that is known for supposedly being mild and great for sensitive skin and what most people think of when they think of natural soap at the store.

This is what EWG says about some of them:

Cocamidopropyl Betaine - A synthetic surfactant used to control viscosity and boost foaming and has been associated with irritation and allergic contact dermatitis.

Tetrasodium EDTA - A chelating agent that is an organ system toxin and enhances the absorption of all the other chemicals into your body.

Tallow - Rendered beef fat. May cause eczema and blackheads and is a cheap source of fat to make soap.  There is typically no way to know the quality or source of the tallow being used, unless it's rendered from the soap makers own cows,  and isn't vegan friendly.

Sodium Lauroyl Isethionate - A mild synthetic detergent, used for cleansing, emulsification and degreasing. It may dry or irritate skin, especially sensitive skin.

Sodium Isethionate -A synthetic detergent which creates dense lather.

Stearic Acid - Fat from cows and sheep and from dogs and cats euthanized in animal shelters, etc. Most often refers to a fatty substance taken from the stomachs of pigs. Can be harsh and irritating to the skin and not vegan friendly.

Lauric Acid - Fatty acid used as an emulsifier in soaps.

Sodium Stearate - Fatty acid.

Sodium Cocoate - Saponified coconut oil.

Sodium Palm Kernelate - Saponified palm kernel oil.

There are several other less harmful ingredients as well, but more ingredients nonetheless.  Does this sound safe and mild to you?  In contrast, we use high quality vegetable oils and unrefined shea butter, making our soaps vegan friendly and excellent for your skin.

Here is our basic soap ingredients list for our olive oil and shea butter soaps:

Olive oil - Moisturizing and mild conditioning properties help to keep skin soft and supple.

Palm Oil - Makes for a nice and hard long-lasting bar with a rich and smooth creamy lather.

Coconut Oil - Wonderful cleansing ability with large, fluffy bubbles.

Unrefined Raw Shea Butter - Makes the lather silky smooth, and leaves your skin amazingly soft.

Sodium Hydroxide (lye - required for making soap)

Distilled Water - necessary to dissolve the lye

It's very important to not only have high quality ingredients, but a balanced percentage of ingredients used in the recipe.  We believe our recipe to make a perfectly balanced soap that has a creamy, long-lasting fluffy lather, that will leave your skin soft and nourished, not dry.  The more you use our olive oil and shea butter soaps, the better your skin feels over time and you too may get hooked on them as many have already.   If you have any questions about any of our products just Contact Us .

To read more about our olive oil soaps , you can click here: Our Homemade Olive Oil and Shea Butter Soaps



Melissa
(soap maker)

Sunday, August 18, 2013

What is hot process soap and how does it differ from the typical cold process method of soap making?

 What is Hot Process Soap?



Hot Process Soap Vs. Cold Process Soap

We make our olive oil and shea butter soaps by the hot process method.  What is hot process soap?  It's like cold process soap in the beginning, but differs once the oils and sodium hydroxide (lye) water mixture are mixed to trace (a soft pudding consistency).  We heat the soap mixture in a crockpot until it's turned fully into soap (saponified) and the lye is gone.



With hot process soap, instead of having to wait 4 to 6 weeks for a cold process soap to cure and be ready to purchase, our soaps are ready to use as soon as they're cooled.  There is no active lye left and no water left that has to cure and dry out since it was evaporated during the cooking process.  They are mild and not caustic.  Our bars are designed to be fairly hard right away but will do best if it hardens for a few days to a week once it's made to harden just a little more.  Hot process soaps have a more rustic, handmade look to them as opposed to cold process soaps and different designs can be achieved.  We personally love not having to wait so long to use our soaps and you just can't beat the feel of a truly from scratch bar of soap where you control all the ingredients that go into it and we love the instant gratification of having made immediately usable soap (we can use the scrapings from the crockpot right away) from start to finish in a little over an hour.  The next day, we can unmold our soaps, slice them, let them dry a few days to a week and package them for sale!



You can check out some of our Youtube videos showing how me make soap the hot process way on our Ginger Grey Soaps Youtube page.

Thanks for stopping by!
Melissa
Ginger Grey Soaps

Are homemade lye soaps safe for your skin? Is there such a thing as a " lye free " soap as some claim?

 Why Use Lye in Homemade Soap?

If lye is a toxic poison, is it safe to use it in homemade soap?

First off, it's impossible to make true homemade soap without lye.  If you've heard otherwise, you've heard false information.  Our olive oil soaps are made with a high quality food grade lye (sodium hydroxide), not drain cleaner picked up from the local hardware store as some soaps are made.  There is a lot of misconception out there that somehow the lye (sodium hydroxide) is still left in homemade soap and that somehow home made soaps are dangerous.  If soap was made properly, there will not be any lye leftover and won't be caustic.  There is no such thing as true soap made without lye.  When the lye water and oils are mixed together and fully saponified, you are no longer left with lye water and oils but something entirely different.  A chemical reaction has taken place and you have an entirely new mixture, soap and glycerin.  People liken it to baking a cake.  You add all these different ingredients and some aren't so good by themselves, but when you mix it all together and bake it, you have something entirely new now, cake.  Glycerin is a humectant and draws moisture from the air onto your skin.  If you add more oils/butters than the lye can saponify (turn into soap), you are left with unsaponifed oils/butters and this is known as superfatting.  We superfat our olive oil soaps with unrefined shea butter, adding to a luxurious feel that is so wonderful for your skin.  The more you use our olive oil soaps, the better your skin will feel over time. 

Is there such a thing as a lye free soap?

Some claim that their soaps were made without lye and act as though that's safer or better, but they are probably referring to a melt and pour soap base or a soap they melted down from the store.  They didn't personally add the lye themselves and didn't have to handle it (so it was lye free for them), but lye was used in the making of the soap base at the factory and should be listed in the ingredients, although not required.  Most so-called soap at the store isn't true soap and didn't use lye.  Instead they are a synthetic detergent bar (syndet bar) full of harmful chemicals that wreak havoc on our skin and bodies.  Some real soaps at the store are made with cheap fats or oils such as tallow (beef fat) which make for a cheaper bar of soap that isn't as balanced a bar of soap as one with several different, conditiong oils.  They usually have some of the glycerin removed and have it sold to be used in lotions and other beauty products.  The soap from the store dries out your skin and then you have to buy lotion to try and fix it.  It's a never ending cycle.  With our homemade soaps, the naturally occurring glycerin is left in and we use top quality oils and butters to make a superior product we trust your skin will be happy about.  So, despite what others may tell you, you really want a quality homemade lye soap made with a balanced recipe, so check out Ginger Grey Soaps today!

Thanks for stopping by!
Melissa
Ginger Grey Soaps

Why are homemade goats milk soaps good for your skin?

 Homemade Goats Milk Glycerin Soaps



Are All Glycerin Soaps the Same?

Our goats milk glycerin soaps are handmade from an all natural goats milk soap base so you can be confident your skin will stay clean and nourished, not dry.  Not all glycerin soaps are made with an all natural base.  A lot of cheaper soap bases are made with lots of harmful chemicals and are no better than what you buy in the store.  Some are purchased from local craft stores and are loaded with toxic chemicals. 

Quality Matters

We think quality is more important than purchasing a cheaper soap base.  Our glycerin soaps contain no SLS, propylene glycol, sulfates, petroleum, or surfactants and contain only the highest quality ingredients.  Make sure you read the ingredient listing of homemade soaps you buy.  If the seller won't disclose the ingredients, there's probably a reason.  We proudly list all of our ingredients on each product listing.  If you ever have any questions about our products, just ask.
 
Why Use Goats Milk in Soap?

Goats milk is known to have wonderful effects on your skin.  It has many skin-loving vitamins such as A, D, B-6, B-12, trigylcerides, and natural emolients making for healthy and soft skin.  The gentle exfoliating properties of alpha-hydroxy acids contained in goats milk help to slough off dead skin cells and leave smooth new cells behind.  This rejuvenates your skin, helping to reduce wrinkles and signs of aging. 

Goats milk has the proteins of milk products that help to protect our skin from invading bacteria and chemicals.  Goats milk has healing properties for skin conditions such as psoriasis, eczema and acne, and general relief for itchy, dry, and damaged skin. 

Our Ingredients

Our goats milk glycerin soap base contains coconut oil, palm oil, and safflower oil which makes for a nice, long-lasting hard bar.  Glycerin soap has glycerin (as does all true homemade soap) which is a humectant and draws moisture from the air onto your skin.  Our soap also contains goats milk and you can read about it's benefits above.  Water and sodium hydroxide (lye) are essential for making the oils turn into soap.  There is no such thing as a lye free soap, unless it's not true soap, but a chemical laden bar instead.  Sorbitol is a naturally occurring ingredient found in many edible fruits and berries, corn, even seaweed and is used because of its outstanding moisturizing properties. Sorbitol also provides clarity and translucency to our glycerin bar soaps.  Sorbitan oleate is an emulsifier made from a vegetable source.  Soybean protein, made from soybeans is used as a conditioner.  Our colorings used are oxides, micas, pigments, or natural colorings.  If a soap lists fragrance as an ingredient, it is a fragrance oil.  If it lists essential oil, then it's an essential oil.

Thanks for stopping by!
Melissa
Ginger Grey Soaps
Check out our goats milk glycerin soaps on Etsy
Also check us out at www.gingergreysoaps.com

Are homemade glycerin soaps good and are they all the same in quality and ingredients? Are they really lye free?

Homemade Glycerin Soaps

Are All Glycerin Soaps the Same?

Our regular and goats milk glycerin soaps are handmade from an all natural soap base so you can be confident your skin will stay clean and nourished, not dry and damaged.  Not all glycerin soaps are made with an all natural base.  A lot of cheaper soap bases are made with lots of harmful chemicals and are no better than what you buy in the store.  Some are purchased from local craft stores and are loaded with toxic chemicals. 

Quality Matters

We think quality is more important than purchasing a cheaper soap base.  Our glycerin soaps contain no SLS, propylene glycol, sulfates, petroleum, or surfactants and contain only the highest quality ingredients.  Make sure you read the ingredient listing of homemade soaps you buy.  If the seller won't disclose the ingredients, there's probably a reason.  We proudly list all of our ingredients on each product listing.   

Our Ingredients

Our glycerin soap base contains coconut oil, palm oil, and safflower oil which makes for a nice, long-lasting hard bar.  Glycerin soap has glycerin (as does all true homemade soap) which is a humectant and draws moisture from the air onto your skin.  Water and sodium hydroxide (lye) are essential for making the oils turn into soap.  There is no such thing as a lye free soap, unless it's not true soap, but a chemical laden bar instead.  Sorbitol is a naturally occurring ingredient found in many edible fruits and berries, corn, even seaweed and is used because of its outstanding moisturizing properties. Sorbitol also provides clarity and translucency to our glycerin bar soaps.  Sorbitan oleate is an emulsifier made from a vegetable source.  Soybean protein, made from soybeans is used as a conditioner.  Our colorings used are oxides, micas, pigments, liquid colorings, or natural colorings.  If a soap lists fragrance as an ingredient, it is a fragrance oil.  If it lists essential oil, then it's an essential oil.

Thanks for stopping by!
Melissa
Ginger Grey Soaps
Check out our glycerin soaps on Etsy
Also check us out at www.gingergreysoaps.com

Why use homemade olive oil soaps? Are all homemade soaps the same?

 Homemade Olive Oil Soaps




Our Ingredients

Ingredients really matter.  Our homemade olive oil soaps and shea butter soaps are made from scratch with skin-loving oils such as olive oil, palm oil, coconut oil, and unrefined shea butter.  Olive oil is known to be great for the skin, and our olive oil soaps have a high percentage of olive oil in them.  Coconut oil makes for a wonderful lather.  Palm oil makes for a hard bar.  We personally designed a recipe that we think makes a perfectly balanced bar of soap.  Each oil we use has different properties and with the amounts we have used this results in a hard bar with a nice, fluffy, creamy long-lasting lather and it has such a soft smooth feel due to the shea butter.  You will feel as though you've put lotion on, with your skin feeling soft and moisturized with no harmful chemicals used, unlike store-bought soap.  Everyone that has tried our olive oil soaps have fallen in love with them.  The more you use them, the better your skin feels over time.

Are All Homemade Soaps the Same?

Not all homemade soaps are created equal.  Depending on the types of oils and percentages used, you can have totally different results.  Check the ingredients before you purchase homemade soap and ask a lot of questions.  If the recipe isn't formulated right, you can end up with a soft bar, slimy bar, a bar with little lather, or not enough cleansing ability or one that cleans too much and leaves your skin dry.  If you've been disappointed in the past with a homemade soap, look no further.  You will love our olive oil soaps and the truly luxurious feel they have from our high quality ingredients.


Thanks for stopping by!
Melissa


Friday, August 16, 2013

Homemade Lavender Soap with Essential Oils - All Natural Shea Butter Soaps

We've added a few new essential oil soaps to our line.  This one below is another lavender soap.  We already have an Oatmeal Lavender soap, which I absolutely love.  The oatmeal adds a wonderful creaminess to the lather, but the soap is uncolored and has a very simple, rustic look to it.  I really wanted a purple lavender soap seeing as how purple is my favorite color.  The color didn't turn out as purple as I would like. It's more of a pinkish purple shade, but it's really pretty and I may keep it that way since it's not your typical lavender shade.  Here it is in the mold topped with dried lavender buds, waiting to cool and then be sliced.

 I love the way it turned out.  Simple and beautiful, and the lavender essential oil smells amazing!
Thanks for stopping by!

Melissa

Hot Process Olive Oil and Shea Butter Soaps - Brown Sugar and Fig and Lemon Spearmint

We've been really busy around here making lots of new soaps, especially our olive oil soaps with shea butter.  Our olive oil and shea butter soaps are made by the hot process technique, giving it a sweet rustic charm.  This is what it looks like once it's out of the mold and ready to cut.  I typically leave my soaps overnight and cut them first thing in the morning.
 Once they are cut, I let them dry out a little more for a few days or up to a week to harden a little bit more.  With hot process soap making, my soaps are ready to use right away and are safe and mild.  I cook them in a crockpot and I can scrape out the soap scraps from the crockpot and make a small bar out of that and use it right away.  It feels so nice and smooth and lathers excellently right away.  With cold process soap making, you have to wait 4 - 6 weeks or longer for the soaps to dry and cure, and even longer sometimes depending on the recipe or if there is a really high percentage of olive oil.
This one is scented with Brown Sugar and Fig and it is a personal favorite, it smells so good and is a Bath and Body Works type scent.  Real cinnamon and brown sugar have been added and it has these lovely brown swirls in it. The cinnamon powder is slightly scrubby too, making it a gently exfoliating soap.
It's available for purchase at Ginger Grey Soaps

 This is our new Lemon Spearmint soap made with lemon and spearmint essential oils.  A delicate yellow shade and topped with calendula petals.  This makes a lovely bath soap, and would be a great addition to any bathroom's decor.  It's available for purchase at Ginger Grey Soaps

Thanks for stopping by!

Melissa

Friday, May 24, 2013

Ginger Grey Soaps - Our new homemade luxury soap store on Big Cartel


If you haven't had a chance to check out our new homemade luxury soap store, Ginger Grey Soaps, now's the time.  Here's a screen shot of it, showing some of our currently available soaps.  We're always creating new things here!  It's hosted by Big Cartel which is primarily for artists and crafters.  We also have a store on Etsy , but we really like how we can customize our own site at Big Cartel and make it more our own.  We take payments securely through Paypal and it's great for those who aren't familiar with Etsy or don't have an Etsy account.  Just go directly to our store Ginger Grey Soaps to see more of the great soaps we have available for sale.

Melissa (soap maker)
Ginger Grey Soaps

Making Homemade All Natural Sweet Orange Lemongrass Hot Process Olive Oil Soap

Last week, I realized we only had one bar left of our Sweet Orange Lemongrass soap.  It's been very popular at the Farmer's Market because once you smell it in person, you just want to have it.  It's so sweet and citrusy and I love making it because the kitchen smells so clean and amazing afterwards.  My kids love to help with anything they can, and this day it was our son Camden's turn to help.  He got to help pour and measure the oils and put them in the crockpot. 
 The mixture has been cooked and fully turned into soap now.  The left side has been colored naturally with annatto seed powder after the cook and scented with Sweet Orange essential oil.  The right side has been colored with neon yellow pigment and scented with Lemongrass essential oil. 
 The Sweet Orange side gets dried grated orange zest and the Lemongrass side gets dried grated lemon zest.
 I randomly plop the two halves into my molds.  I made a big batch this time, so it will make 18 bars and fills a 10 inch and 8 inch loaf mold.  This is the largest size I can fit in my 6 quart crockpot without having it overflow.  Even still I have to be careful or I'll have a soap volcano all over the counter.  Been there, done that!  Atleast my crockpot and counters were squeaky clean when I was done. : )
Now just waiting for it to cool.  If I make a batch early in the morning, I can slice into it by evening already.  If I make it later in the day, I just wait until morning to slice into it when it's firmer.
  This soap is ready to use right away, but benefits by drying out for a few days to get a harder bar.  It's still fairly hard right away though.  There is no lye left in the soap and it's mild and safe to use.  In fact, I scrape out my crockpot and scrape off my mixing bowls and utensils and I have enough scraps to make a decent size bar of soap once I squish it all together (see last picture).  I have so many different soaps by the kitchen sink and in our bathrooms from scraping out everything after each soap I make. I get too much though and pass them along to friends who are more than happy to get soap scraps off my hands and into theirs.  : )
Our hot process soaps are made primarily with olive oil, then we add palm oil and coconut oil.  After the cook, we add unrefined shea butter.  It hasn't gone through the saponification process and acts as a superfat above and beyond the typical 5% superfat in homemade soap. 
Our soaps feel so luxurious on your skin and when you wash up with them, they have a long-lasting fluffy lather like no other.  When you're done washing, you feel like you have just put lotion on and your skin is so soft and silky.  I suppose it's similar to the feeling of a Dove Beauty Bar, but without all the harmful chemicals.  That's stuff isn't real soap anyways, but this is the real deal.  No chemicals here, just all natural soapy goodness and it's such a treat for your skin.  Stop by and grab a bar for yourself or as a gift!

Melissa (soap maker)
Ginger Grey Soaps