Make your own luxurious, beautiful soaps at home—with all-natural ingredients. We often think about how the things we put into our body affect us, but how much time do we take to consider how the things we put onto our body? This timely book is packed full of helpful advice about how to make your own luxurious and beautiful soaps at home, using only the best natural ingredients.
Sarah Ade lists natural ingredients and their properties before describing how to combine them for a specific purpose. She also discusses the benefits of a macrobiotic lifestyle and holistic skin care, and why your body will thank you for them. This is an essential guide for anyone interested in what they put onto their body as well as what they put inside.
About the Self-Sufficiency Series : More and more Americans are becoming concerned about living a healthier land more environmentally-friendly lifestyle. Whether it’s moving to the country and starting over on a whim or just making city-living a little simpler and easier, the “Green” movement is changing the way we live our day-to-day lives. Skyhorse’s new Self-Sufficiency handbooks are meant to help—offering advice on what to do, how to do it better, and how to save money as well. This is a beautifully-illustrated series made even more beautiful because its goal is to help everyone live in a more earth-friendly fashion. 100 color illustrations
Overall there is a lot of useful information and cautions about using the various materials for soap making. I appreciate how the author explains things simply as well as offering troubleshooting. There are lots of recipes with a variety of scents, but that is a negative for me. I had hoped to find a really good base recipe, with no fragrances. There is one that uses a water infusion but I am not confident enough to replace that with plain water. The author says the finished soap has a clean and fresh scent, which may be accurate but as someone with a sensitivity to fragrance, it is not worth the risk.
If you want a detailed manual for soap making and lots of different recipes, you will probably benefit from this book. There are no photos of the soaps though.
The author provides a thorough description of the saponification process as well as various ingredients used in soap-making. Ade takes the time to describe the properties of the different base oils used as well as essential oils, herbal infusions and dry ingredients (herbs and flowers visually present in soaps). All of Ade's recipes require a combination of coconut oil, palm oil, and olive oil as well as other ingredients.
Some good ideas and information, however, recipes are not by weight. My batch was lye heavy and couldn't be saved. Be sure to run recipes through a reliable lye calculator if you use them.