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Solid Lotion Recipe
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Posted by soap2go (My Page) on Fri, Dec 12, 03 at 8:51
| Hello All, I am a newbie here.
I recently made some solid lotion bars, the recipe I used made an incredibly hard bar but I adapted it and it's now become the best seller at a local farmers market that I attend. I wondered if anyone knows of any other similar recipes?
I used:
equal weight measures of:
sweet almond oil
coconut oil
cocoa butter
beeswax
then added Jasmine essential oil (absolute but blended 6% in Jojoba oil)
I didn't do the stages, just shoved it all in a bowl, added the jasmine after it had all melted together & poured it into the soap moulds.
I have been suggesting people keep one by their sink so that when they have washed their hands & dried them, they rub a little on rather than a hand lotion. It is truly amazing stuff and lasts ages... best of all... it's so easy that even a muppet like me can make it! |
Follow-Up Postings:
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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Hi, My lotion bars a huge seller as well, people where I live cannot get enough of them. Yeah!!!!! My recipe: This makes 6 1 oz bars 1oz Sweet Almond Oil 1oz Beeswax 1/2 oz Shea Butter 1/2 oz Cocoa Butter A pinch of Jojoba Sheres (for color if you want to add color, this is optional) Melt down, cool for a few then add what ever fragrance you desire) These bars are yummy, just the right consistency, not to greasy, not to hard. My most recent hot seller was Pumpkin Spice. Good Luck!!!!!!!! Elle |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Correction, the above recipe makes 3 bars I double, triple etc for more bars |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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Do you guys just make bars out of them? I've put them in the deodorant looking containers before but don't sell well that way. Thought that would be better for travel bars but they tend to melt when they get left in a hot place. mary |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| I make round bars out of them and put them in a round 2" tin, mine sell like hot cakes. I get the tins from WSP. I make them in a muffin tin because I have not been able to find the right size mold to suit the size I am making. Other people I have seen put in the deodorant containers do not seem to sell many. I don't know why, people seem to like the tins. I have not had any melt thus far but I always tell people not to keep in car or direct sunlight etc. I can't keep these in stock, it doesn't matter how many I make I always need more. Good Luck! Elle |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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Elle, That is a good idea about the tins. I made some in those lotion bar containers and I don't like the looks of them (and I guess my customers don't either because they don't sell). To me, they look too much like deodorant. What size tins did you buy from WSP for these? How come you just don't pour it directly into the tins to cool instead of using the muffin pan? Susan |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| You have to put in a mold because the whole idea is for them to be able to turn the tin over and pop the bar right out of the tin so they can actually handle it and use on body. I make 1oz bars in a muffin tin and put them in a 2" tin from WSP, they fit perfect. After I melt the butter etc. I add fragrance then I put the tin on my scale and measure out an ounce of oil into each muffin round. I let them sit for a little while until they are set then I stick in freezer for about 10 minutes so they pop right out of the muffin tins. I let them sit for a few then transfer to the 2" tins. I put a 1 1/2 inch round label on them when done. You probably already know this, if you want colored bars use jojoba beads (just a little) for color. OK, Good luck!!! Elle |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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I usually use food coloring for color, but recently I have seen several people mention using jojoba beads for color. I was always under the impression that they were hard little things- do they melt? Susan |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Yes, the Jojoba beads melt, I got a combo pack somewhere and they last forever. You add them to your lotion bar mixture before melting. FYI-you cannot use food coloring or liquid color if you are putting in tins, they will rust. I am surprised your lotion bars turned out with the food coloring, when I first starting making them I added liquid color and they were a mess, the liquid color and oils seperated etc. I even add pearly fine body glitter to one of mine, it is one of my best sellers. Well, good luck with the lotion bars. Do you by any chance have a salt scrub recipe that is thick instead of laying in oil. I am working on one right now, not as easy as I thougt. Elle |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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I don't know what I was thinking about- I have never colored any of my lotion bars, but I do use food coloring for anything else that needs color. I have never tried a salt scrub yet, although I have thought about making them. I guess I haven't made any because they just don't sound like something I would want to use. I know that doesn't make sense, but you know how it is when you don't like something but everyone else does, but still you never cook it or whatever. LOL. I sure didn't know jojoba beads would melt though. I may try some of them sometime. Susan |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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Hi all, I stumbled upon your site in a google search, after trying a solid lotion bar. My daughter wants to give these as little gifts to the many people she deals with over Christmas. Where on earth do you buy the ingredients for these things? Sweet Almond Oil Beeswax Shea Butter Cocoa Butter Jojoba Sheres Do craft stores like Michaels have them? I have googled and froogled and find products with them IN them, but not the product itself. Any help appreciated! thanks, Nancy |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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I purchase mine from on-line industry suppliers. The two I use mostly are kangarooblue.com and Wholesale Supplies Plus. Susan |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| I bought some plastic sample containers, could these be used to house the lotion bars? |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Are these the Solo "deli" containers? I don't see why not. I use 4oz flat tins from SpecialtyBottle.com. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Oh and I pour directly into the tins. When the bars cool, they will pop out when the tin is tipped over. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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Soap2Go... Believe it or not, I'm actually looking for a "too hard" recipe for massage bars - most are too soft for me, and with summer coming up fast I'd like something with a bit more hardness. Do you still have that original recipe that you thought was too hard? Thanks, Carol |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| more beeswax, less oils. I'd actually replace some butters with the oils and leave the wax the same. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hi folks.I just stumbled onto your board while looking for a way to use up my lotion.I have several bottles of expensive lavender body lotion that I can't use.(My skin is very sensitive to alcohol & fragrance.)I had never heard of lotion bars 'til I found you.Does anyone know if I can use my lotion to make lotion bars?Could I just mix the lotion & some beeswax,& pour into molds?Any advice would be greatly appreciated!Thanks. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| It would still have the things in it that you say irritates your skin. I'd just gift the lotion to someone else and start from scratch. With a little research, you can learn what oils and items that would benefit your skin, and make lotion bars. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hi guys! I'm new to this forum, and am starting a small retail business selling candles and natural beauty products that I create. My question is to elle110,or anyone else who sells these things, How much do you charge for your lotion bars and how do you figure the pricing? cause I'm somewhat stummped... I want to make a decent profit, but I don't want to over charge people. A little help pleeeease! Thanks! |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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Shammi, I paid $7 for a lotion bar (in a cute, round tin) while on vacation on the carribbean island of Anguilla. At the time, I thought it was a great price |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| I sell mine in a 4oz flat tin for $5. Figure out your costs per item, and times it by 3 or 4. 4 is ideal, but somewhere in between 3 and 4 tims the cost is usually where I put my prices. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Terri & bswarner, thank you soooo much for the pricing info! It was a huge help. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Is there anything I can use in place of the sweet almond oil? I have grape seed oil. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| I am so glad to have found these recipes, since my husband does bees and I have wax. Thank you. I loved the lotion bars that I have tried! |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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Ellen, I know this is way late, but it might help others. You can sub any 'body' safe oil. I like to use a combo of oils most of the time. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Thank you Terri you timing worked out well as I have been off line for some time, thank you for your help. I have many more questions do you make soap too? |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hi all i also found you from the henna tribe page. so far bought the bee's wax, is 5.99 a lb a good price, having a hard time on the coco butter but i did find one. can you tell me a good price for what size, if i can find a mold big enough i want to use those. when you say you put an 1oz per batch, i do henna and they sell it for a balm to protect them, also for hand lotion,in a bar. A size that would fit in a purse would be nice. how much do you make in a batch for an ounce of eo's, we use them in henna and can get pretty pricey for an ounce. Well nice to be here. Diane |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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Someone asked about a salt scrub recipe. I have a recipe that isn't perfect yet but it's close. I've been selling bath salts and found that if you don't add water, the salt scrub doesn't solidify into a chunk. Here's what I stumbled onto: 4 C Epsom Salt (Magnesium Sulfate -good stuff for your body, don't substitute!) 1 C Sea Salt (optional and exchangable for any sort of salt) 1/2 TBS Jojoba Oil 1/2 TBS Sweet Almond Oil 1/4 TBS Vitamin E Oil 20 drops fragrance -remember that essential oils are more potent! 6 drops liquid coloring This recipe doesn't stay "wet". It will feel like beach sand. Simply put a teaspoon (or perfered amount) into your hand, wet under the faucet then scrub! The oils can be mixed and matched to personal preference. Remember that different oils leave different feelings on your skin. For example, olive oil is the closest you can get to your natural skin's oils but it takes a long time to soak in so you feel like a greased pig for a while. I like my combo becuase it doesn't sit in a grease pot -it actually feels like sand to the touch. Once you put your hands under water and scrub, you can feel the oils working into your skin. After I've dried, I have the same sensation as just putting on my favorite hand lotion. You can touch paper etc after using this product because there are no mineral oils. (I'm sure I don't need to tell this group why mineral oils are terrible!) I'd love feedback on anyone who tries the recipe! Sabrina |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hi, I'm new here. And I've never made solid lotion bars before, but I really want to try! My question is: if you make the bar and realize it's too soft or too hard, can you melt it back down and add more ingredients? Thanks in advance for your help!! |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| I'm new at the lotion bars also. I made my first batch last night and was disappointed that they were so soft. Now I see that I need to have approximately equal amounts of the soft oils/butters and the hard ones. I re-did mine this morning with more beeswax, but it still was not enough. I am going to re-melt and add even more beeswax. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Yes you can remelt and add more beeswax, or melt the beeswax down, and then add the other batch in and melt just til soft and liquidy. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hi I am making a basic solid lotion bar recipe, my question is how long does it take to set so that I can tell if it is too hard or too soft or just right? Ruth |
Here is a link that might be useful: White Witch Natural Beauty Products
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| would anyone agree that perfume solids and scented lotion bars are similar if not the same. Im trying to figure this out so that i can create my product line , i dont want to sell the same product .help |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hi, I found this website and was wondering if you could tell me with the shea butter which one do I you use? I found a site to purchase it from and they have pour and melt or natural. I have also found some other recipes that don't call for the shea butter what is the bene of it? Thank you in advance. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| April, IMO, I like my perfume "solid" softer. And lotion bars firmer. Really though a solid perfume and a lotion bar can have the same ingredients, just different proportions. Bobbi, I've not heard of the pour and melt Shea. I prefer to use other butters in place of Shea. Two of my favorites are Aloe Butter and Mowrah Butter. You can interchange butters for each other in recipes. Find a butter you like and try it out. Cocoa butter is a firmer butter. The Aloe and Mowrah are a soft butter, I'd say that Shea is in between in firmness. I also like Virgin Coconut Oil. It's closer to a butter than regular Coconut Oil. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| newbie wondering how y'all would incorporate herbs into your lotions? do you use the finely chopped product, or a tincture/extract? if you use the extract--is it a water ased or vinegar, glycerine or alcohol based extract? anyone make these themselves? also approximately how many drops of essential oils do you use for a typical lotion bar? thanks for help with my relentless questions!! 'toast |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| For solid lotion, I use equal parts by weight of shea butter, jojoba oil and beeswax. For a 2-3 oz bar, I add 1 tsp (5 ml) essential oil. I am not a seller, just making things for personal use, but I am pretty pleased wit the results. If you are using molds to make bars, silicone muffun pans are great for this. It is really easy to get bars (or soaps) out. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hi - I have been making lotion bars for myself and family, but would like to sell some at a local craft show - do I need to add preservatives? Thanks - Lori |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| I'm curious--when putting fragrances/essential oils in massage or lotion bars, must you use a carrier such as jojoba oil, or can you be fine with just putting the FOs and EOs straight in te mix as it cools? Thanks so much! |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Lori, I use the contents of one vitamin E capsule for preservative function. Cheaper than liquid vitamin E stuff...and totally safe. Works well! |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Does anyone have a picture of these bars in the tins. I'm sorry but I don't get to go to craft shows so I really can't invision what they look like. So you just rub them on your hands after you wash your hands? Sounds neat! |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Can someone please tell me the difference between refined and unrefined shea butter? There seems to be quite a price difference and I don't want to invest a lot in the wrong thing. Thanks! |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Marthaclaudette, the simple fact is unrefined has much more "skin" healing value. But my favorite butters are Mowrah and Aloe in place of Shea and Cocoa Butter. Arkansas Girl, I'll try and remember to a picture and post it. Roxy, yes the fo or eo, goes into the "mix" after oils, butters and wax are melted together. |
the look of aloe and avocado butter
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| was hoping someone could tell me if aloe and avocado butter are supposed to be 'liquid' ? I ordered these 2 and palm oil and they came in the 2lb clear tubs with screw tops - which when they came were all over the place, but after a week in my pantry, they are each partly solid, partly liquid...If I try to shake them up to combine the oil, it looks like melted butter with solid small chunks floating around....does this sound right?? sure doesn't look right :-) thanks! |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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I keep all my butters and oils in the fridge..so they are all solid.lol.they all have different "melt" points. My Aloe butter doesn't take long to soften and liquify at room temp though.. Unless you are making a ton and going through alot, I'd put them all in the fridge..other wise they will go rancid. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hi All! I am just wanting to get into making lotion bars. I live in Northern Arizona - all items shipped to me MUST pass thru Phoenix - which is extremely hot right now. I was just wondering about the butters and do they melt? Is it OK if they do? Any input would be helpful. If it's not OK - I'll have to drive 3 hours to Phoenix to pick up supplies! UGH! |
Cream Recipe
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| Hi there! I was wondering if anyone has a good lotion or cream recipe that is not greasy? I've tried a million different recipes and I just can't get something that is not too greasy. Thanks a lot. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| I am new here and hope someone can help me. I make soy candles and bath salts. I am seeking a recipe for a massage candle. The only thing I can find out is that they are made with a lip balm, lotion base. Does anyone have a recipe? Thanks for any help you may provide. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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skeeter- I made lotion bars last year for my clients for christmas- they turned out great. I purchased my ingredients from a local place here in Scottsdale. I bought my ingredients about this time last year and everything was fine. I had them shipped too. here's a photo http://img67.imageshack.us/my.php?image=garden009rn9.jpg The labels could have been fancier but I gave a couple of bars to each client with some magic gloves and packaged them with ribbon..plus I'm not real hot with graphics. I did a lot of research for ingredients and recipes. Kelly at Soapy Supplies was wonderful to deal with. She returned emails promptly and was very knowledgable. Superior customer service! this is my recipe and my supplier list The recipe I used to make the lotion bars- 5oz of beeswax 4oz of sweet almond oil 2oz of cocoa butter 2oz of shea butter 1 capsule of vitamin E oil 3 teaspoons of essential or or less. I just used a food scale to measure the oil, wax and butters. Pour the measured ingredients into a bowl and microwave it until it's melted..maybe stirring it a little. Don't add the essential (fragrance oil) until after you've melted the measured ingredients. Some essential oils have a low flash point so you don't want to microwave them. Be sure to stir the mixture after you add the essential oil and then pour it into the molds. It was cool outside when I made mine so I would take it outside and let it cool. If you try to rush it by putting them in the freezer/refrigerator they could crack or get moisture spots. Sometimes it takes a while to cool. If they're warm at all, they'll stick to the mold. After one batch make sure your pour is right and the bars fit in the tins. I had to pour my flower molds a little "short" otherwise the tops hit the lid on the tins. Super easy. I purchased blank, white round sticky labels on ebay and then printed them on my printer. If you have a laser printer you could make really nice clear labels. The molds came from 3dmolds.com http://www.3dmolds.com/mini-molds/index.php Any guest soap mold or mini mold will work. The more detail there is in the mold, the higher the chance that pieces of the bar will get stuck in the mold when you remove it. The tin containers are from here.. https://www.specialtybottle.com/index.asp?PageAction=VIEWPROD&ProdID=227 .32 a piece if you order 145 or more. I purchased the almond fragrance and the oatmeal fragrance from here http://www.sweetcakes.com/default.php?cPath=15 However, the most popular fragrance by far was the green tea & cucumber. I purchased that at JoAnns. It comes in tiny little bottles and it was expensive. If you can find a refreshing scent through sweetcakes.com it would be a lot cheaper. Raw materials Beeswax beads natural 10 lbs shea butter 3 lbs cocoa butter white 3 lbs Sweet Almond oil one gallon (which doesn't have a scent..I assumed it would have an almond fragrance..it doesn't) http://www.soapies-supplies.com/shop/ I think I ended up with about 265-280 lotion bars. I lost track of how many I made and just went by the number of tins I used...but I also gave away some bars that weren't in tins. The molds hold a little over 1oz of lotion and the tins are 2oz tins. |
massage candle
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As far as the massage candle goes- I found this recipe. I have NOT tried it. I plan on mixing and trying in the next week or so... 3 ounces of Soy Wax 5/8 Ounce of Shea Butter .25 ounce of Coconut Oil .25 Sweet Almond Oil Place wick into tin securely. Melt the above ingredients, scent with your favorite scent and then pour into containers. These are great. I don't know what kind of wick to use. I think wicks have different temperatures so I'm clueless here. Still researching... I've seen more warnings than anything else. I plan on including a label that says "don't pour the hot wax directly on your skin- blow the flame out, let it cool a bit then scoop the warm wax out." Also- that it's not meant to be a candle..that it's a solid lotion with a warming wick...all that stuff. I'm not selling them, I'm making them as gifts for my clients..but I'm still very careful about the liability issue. I have insurance but I still don't want to get sued! |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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Hi Everyone, Just joined this wonderful site. Found it while looking for lotion bar recipes. Thanks for all the help. Today I bought all my oils and butters from my local food co-op. Most of the oils came from uncleharrys.com. Though, after looking at the sites prices, I got a better deal at the co-op. Uncleharrys prices aren't bad and he has a huge selection. Dale |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Is the solid lotion still selling well? What companion items do you sell? And how do you sample the solid lotion? I'm new to this, so any help is much appreciated. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| I also use www.specialtybottle.com for soap tins. They have a variety of sizes and people just love the finished look. I have not used them for lotion bars but I'm sure they would work well. |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| I was working on a recipe that didn't involve Beeswax. I want to thank you all first for helping me to learn a little bit more about the kinds of ingredients typically used. My modified solid lotion bar - vegetable only. 2 oz Soy Wax 2 oz shea butter 1 oz shea nut oil 20 drops essential. (During my experiment batch it was a purchased blend of tea tree oil & lavender oil) It feels just solid enough without being too hard, doesn't seem too crumbly and just slightly more oily than a bar I purchased that used beeswax, shea &cocoa butter, almond oil |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hello, That was really wonderful technique, i`ll try to make it by my self, i have never tried to make soap or candles before. Regards, sarah_9 |
Here is a link that might be useful: Candles & Lotion: Detergent, Hand wash, Cream & Soy candle
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Hi! I am loving this board! I just joined and have a question. I am just getting started in making lotion bars and balms and soaps and such. Does anyone have opinions about whether shea butter or cocoa butter is better for these applications? The shea is a little cheaper, but if the cocoa is better, then I don't mind spending a few dollars more. Is there much of a difference? |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Someone asked a while back about using moisturizing lotion and mixing it with beeswax, whether that would work. Since they were skin sensative to their lotion and were advised against it, there was no actual answer. Does anyone know if it is possible. I have lots of lotions but am hopeless at using them and would prefer to use them as a solid bar. Thanks |
RE: Solid Lotion Recipe
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| Woodenspooncreations, to answer you, either butter will make a nice lotion bar. If unrefined, either will have its own slight aroma. personally I am not crazy about the smell of cocoa butter, but that is just my own preference.(Both are also available in deodorized versions.) Both are good for skin. But I believe the shea butter is higher in Vitamins A & E, which can reduce skin irritation. So I stick to that one. |
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