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Taiwan Swirl

I’ve been on a bit of a self imposed soaping break recently, in preparation for ‘The Big Move’, and it feels like ages since I last made soap.Β  When Amy of Great Cakes Soapworks posted this month’s soaping challenge – the beautiful Taiwan Swirl – I decidedΒ  to sign up just to watch the tutorial and see how it’s done. Β  Anyhow, watching the video got me itching to make soap again, so, at the eleventh hour, I unpacked all the soaping gear (to raised eyebrows from my other half :-D) and gave it a shot.

The Taiwan Swirl calls for a really really thin soap batter, which I knew would be my first challenge. My usual recipe traces fairly quickly and wouldn’t be any good for this design. Amy suggested 80% Olive oil to 20% Coconut oil, so I ran that through SoapCalc and decided I’d like the final soap to be a bit more bubbly. I plumped for 70% Olive oil, 20% Coconut oil and 10% Castor oil. Some of you will have spotted the obvious mistake already – guess who totally forgot that Castor oil can speed up trace?

I mixed up a blend of Lemon, Clary Sage and Ginger essential oils to fragrance the soap, and chose what I hoped would be complementary green and orange micas for the colours. I dispersed the micas in about 15ml of Olive oil:

photo 1(2)

I had already made up the lye solution and melted/mixed the oils earlier in the day, so I had both at room temperature. I added the lye to the oils and briefly mixed with the stick blender to the point of a very VERY light trace.Β  Amy, in her video, suggested stopping as soon as the batter was emulsified and just before it traced, but I missed that window and definitely hit traceΒ  πŸ™‚Β  I poured a very small amount (just over 100ml from a 750g batch) of batter into each jug of mica and poured the remaining batter into the mould. I knew I was running out of time as the batter in the mould was thickening so I quickly poured the coloured mixes into the base (from high, to get the colour down through the batter to the base – one down one side, lengthways, and the other down the other side). Both were poured at the same time, which proved challenging!

Then I swirled, using a skewer. The swirling is a bit difficult to explain without a diagram but here goes: Put the skewer into the mould, right down to the base, in one corner of the mould then make tight ‘s’ shapes from one short end of the mould, side to side down the length of the mould to the other short end. Then, keeping the skewer in the mould, make long ‘s’ shapes along the length of the mould – at 90 degrees to the first ‘s’ shapes. I hope that makes sense but if not there are some great YouTube tutorials on my Pinterest board here.

Anyone spot the next obvious mistake? Yup, I forgot to add the essential oil blend. Ah well, too late to do anything about it :-s

photo 2(1)At this stage I was a little bit disappointed with what was in the mould – the swirls weren’t as fine as I’d hoped, and the green colour wasn’t very defined, but by the next morning it was looking better, and by the time I cut it I was pretty happy with the result….

Taiwan Swirl by The Soap Mine

It’s still pretty soft – I’ve never made a soap with such a high percentage of liquid oils before – and I think it’s going to need a good long cure time to get nice and hard. I really should have left it for at least 48 hours before cutting, rather than my normal 24 hours, but I was in a hurry to get this post finished, and a picture uploaded onto to Amy’s challenge web page before the deadline, so that’s what I’m off to do now πŸ˜€

Thanks Amy for another great challenge!

34 thoughts on “Taiwan Swirl

    1. Thank you! (Just wish it had a beautiful fragrance too lol πŸ™‚ )

  1. Very nice! I love your color choices πŸ™‚

    1. Thanks so much :0)

  2. Nice soft colors, beautiful swirls! πŸ™‚

    1. Thanks so much Tricia! πŸ˜€

  3. Very pretty! The colors are perfect for an unscented soap too.

    1. Thanks JV πŸ˜€ I guess natural colours are good for an unscented soap aren’t they – I didn’t think of that angle!

  4. Gorgeous soap, Vicki!

    Wish you a healthy 2014 full of soaps πŸ˜‰

    1. πŸ˜€ Thanks Natalia! You too – looking forward to a soapy 2014 with all my online soaping buddies πŸ˜‰

  5. I really love the subtle, misty colours – and the swirls look great.

    1. Thanks Debbie! The colours aren’t what I was aiming for, but I’m happy now with how it looks.

  6. Glad you made it, Vicki! Your soap turned out beautiful! πŸ™‚

    1. Thanks Silvia! I’m glad too – it felt great to get back in the saddle πŸ˜€

  7. We’ve all been there!! Soap is made, scent is still sitting there…still a very fine looking soap!! Great color choices!!

    1. Ha ha ha thanks Amy – lots of people like unscented right? πŸ˜€

  8. I really like the soft colors and great swirls to go with it!

    1. Thanks Cris – If I had another go I think I’d try to deepen the colours a bit, but it’s a lot better than I thought it was going to be πŸ˜€

  9. Turned out beautiful, Vicki! Glad you made some soap again. It’s not too terrible to repack the soap supplies, right?! πŸ˜‰

    1. Right Katy πŸ™‚ Thing is, not sure I can bear to pack them away again just yet lol…

  10. You did a beautiful job Vicki. It’s good to keep the SO guessing about what you will and won’t do for your passion. πŸ˜‰

    1. Ah πŸ™‚ Thanks Monica!

  11. Your soap turned out really pretty, Vicki! Bummer about leaving the EOs out, but the swirls are gorgeous! Best of luck in the challenge!

    1. Thanks Jenny! I’ll find another project to use up the blend, but I so wish it had gone into this one :-S

  12. Wow, that turned out beautiful Vicki! After forgetting my fragrance a couple of times, I now put it in the mold after I measure it to make sure I don’t forget it!!!

    1. Cee, that’s a good idea – think I’ll have to give that a go in future! Could have kicked myself πŸ˜€

  13. Isn’t it funny how they sometimes turn out much better than they look when you first pour them?! Turned out lovely. And Cee what a brilliant idea to put the fragrance in your mould!

    1. Thanks Gail, and you’re right. Straight after the pour/swirl I really thought it looked a bit pants and felt a bit disappointed with it – I was genuinely surprised when I looked at it the following day and realised it wasn’t too awful after all! πŸ˜€

  14. I hate when I forget to add something! Luckily, it’s often some decorative element, which is something I can live with. And still better to forget fragrance than an oil, right?
    Your soap is so natural and romantic looking, you can use it as a facial soap, without being worried about skin reaction on fragrance, and the recipe promises a good facial wash!

    1. Oooh Maja – I didn’t think about that – it should make a good facial soap! Great suggestion, thank you πŸ˜€

  15. Very pretty swirls!
    I did the same thing recently and forgot to add my EO’s to my soap batter. I usually make my kids go upstairs when I make soap, but my 7 yr was making crafts and PROMISED she would be quite, but instead she talked and talked the whole time, and I was distracted and forgot to add the EO’s. Now I have a beautiful but unscented soap…oh well. I think this kind of thing happens to every soap maker at some point. πŸ™‚

    1. Hahahaha it’s so easily done πŸ˜€ even without chatty offspring lol!

  16. This soap looks so nice that I think it would be a perfect soap for faces or people who don’t want fragrance! Lovely colors!

    1. Thanks Andee – yep, I definitely think I’m going to try this one out on myself as a facial soap – I will have to report back at some point in the future πŸ™‚

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