Hand Crafted Soap

Hand Crafted Soap
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Author: Delores Boone
Publisher: North Light Books
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5
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Hand Crafted Soap Description

Binding: Paperback
EAN: 0035313321382
ISBN: 1581802684
Number Of Items: 1
Book Pages: 128
Publication Date: 2002-10
Publisher: North Light Books

Editorial Review of Hand Crafted Soap

Making beautiful decorative soap is easy and fun with this 28-project, step-by-step guide. Within a couple of hours, crafters will have a range of unique, sanitary soaps that are ready to use or wrap as gifts.

The author's no-fail methods enable even absolute beginners to create soaps of all colors, shapes, designs and scents. Each chapter explores a different technique for making hot processed soap--from the "oven method" for large batches, to the author's very own "crock-pot method" for ease of use.

There is also a chapter that reveals proven "recipes" for making a variety of hot-processed and melt and pour soaps.

Almost everything the reader needs can be found in the average kitchen, and the soap materials are readily available at craft, grocery and hardware stores. Best of all, this soap is inexpensive to make and easier on the skin than traditional store-bought soap.=



Customer Reviews of Hand Crafted Soap

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Review Summary: Handcrafted Soap
Review: Great book. Lots of good information on soap making, lots of pictures. I would recommend it for use in conjunction with another book, Milk-based soap, by Casey Makela, as I make goat milk soap, and it doesn't have anything specific to that product. But it will be very helpful otherwise.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Review Summary: Comment from the Author
Review: This book was originally 178 worded pages. North Light has a fixed format of 128 pages total. I am sorry to say the pertinent things soap makers had asked me to write about was was edited out to make room for pictures and melt and pour including the reason I call olive oil is a neutral oil. I was referencing the effects oils have on softening or it having the ability to reverse the softening power of oils, such as, sunflower. Much of the book is out of context.
I was not given the book for review until 30 days prior to printing, and the charts not all for review, so there was no time for North Light to correct anything. I have, however, posted explanations and corrections that I feel need to be made in the second printing on my soap list, especially the Lye-Water Chart correction.....

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Review Summary: Easy, Fun and Accurate
Review: If you want to make hot process soap in the easiest and most reliable manner you can find this is the book for it. This book, and author, are truly amazing. Finally a soap book with easy instructions and color photos for visual learners! Photos througout for slow cooker, double boiler and oven cooking
methods, as well as, the finished soaps.

This book does away with much of the repetative rhetoric that is in every other soap book (warnings about essential oils, naming what some of their properties, etc., as this is can be found online. She gets down to the business of How To Do It along with extras usually NOT seen in other books, such as: including an Oil Property chart so you need not get online to
recall what an oil does, EO blending so that you know the formula of how to blend top,mid and bottom notes, and she even explains briefly what each major fatty acid in oil might do for a bar of soap in the (edited) soap designing section of the book.

On a personal note I joined Ms. Boone yahoo group. She is the only author I am aware of that invites her readers to a group, to email her or ring her with questions. She truly cares for the soap making success of her readers and group members.



Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Review Summary: This is the Best Hot Processed Soap book ever.
Review: I loved your book. It made hot processing soap so easy. After several months of trial and error making hot processed soap on my own, I literally stumbled onto your book while searching the web. I ordered it from my local bookstore and have been blessed with wonderful soaping experiences ever since. Your explaination of the various methods, the use of the different additives along with the characteristics of each oil, and your beautiful illustrations led me to try all sorts of new combinations. Along with making my own basic soap recipe, I tried several of your recipes, each one becoming my new favorite! I kept tweeking my own recipe using some of your suggestions and I must say that now, thanks to all your good advice, I make a very nice bar of soap that is beautifully scented. Whether you are aware of it or not, you and I have enjoyed many pleasurable, and successful, hours of soapmaking together. Thank you.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Review Summary: Great book and a simple soapmaking method!
Review: I checked this book and a few others out of the library when I was interested in making my own soap. This is the one I used, the method is simple, and the book explains the qualities of different oils and essential oils. I'm sure I would not have started making my own soap if it weren't for this book, it really provides all you need to know.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Review Summary: Great Pictorial of HP Soap Making !
Review: Put out by North Light Books it's purpose to show BEGINNING hot process soap makers how easy it really is to make wonderful soaps from scratch that are safe to use when cooled. Included in this book, besides full color pictures on every page, are wonderful charts, tips and vendor listings naming reputable sellers of soap supplies, digital scales, packaging supplies and hard to find items.
I am on the author's list and even though I had already made my first HP soap while waiting for the books release I had to get the book because it is the first of it's kind.
If you are an experienced soap maker then you may not want to invest in a this how to book. But for a beginner it is perfect, explaining to the timid newbie how to make lye soap using heat without worries of soap boil overs. There is a reason for doing it the author's way as opposed to what might be found on the Internet: safety. Whether you are a list member of her group or someone she has never met but purchased her book your safety is her first concern and it shows.
The only down side of the book is what the editors cut out of it! What was turned into them was so much more but there was no room in the predesigned format for everything and the editor chose what to add and what to cut. They chose make a great book into a beginner book. Insulting the author is misdirected by those who criticize. Publishers invest money and make most of the decisions on book content. It is a pity they failed to listen to the author who wanted to put it all in because it truly would have been a soap makers bible if they had.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Review Summary: Great for beginners
Review: This book is wonderful for the beginning soap maker, or the beginning hot process soap maker to use. The step by step color photos leaves little doubt to an inexperienced soap maker what is happening or how the cook progresses. Seeing an exact is a good stress reliever that one does not find on Internet boards or email lists where you will get different opinions as to what you should expect. Each person cooks with different temperatures. The buy different brands and shaped pot and fill the pots to varied levels. This book teaches the new soapmaker the safest way to prepare and cook the soap so it will decrease the risk of boil over to nil as long as they follow directions
accurately.
Hot Process soap does take a little practice to recognize when the soap has newly finished. The book advises to not stir the soap during the cook so the new person can see the by-product of saponification (glycerin) floating on top of the finished soap. This is mentioned in the book, most event on page 101.
If a soap maker reduces the water amount needed or lets her soap cool too long before adding fragrance then yes she will have a poor texture soap. But if one knows the tricks on how to add low flash point fragrances at a slightly higher temperature without losing the scent they do not need cool the soap to the point of it looking like mashed potatoes rather than hot Petroleum Jelly
it should resemble.
As for needing a chemist to explain soap making it is not that hard of an equation: fat and oil plus lye plus water will create enough heat to saponify those ingredients into soap and glycerin. My understanding is that synthetic detergents are what chemists have worked with since about 1942. If that is what a reader is searching for they can probably find this information in Essentially Soap written by a Chemist named Robert McDaniel. But if someone is interested in making real soap the safest way possible, and have patience to practice the craft she is learning, then this book is great! Anything unexplained in the book can be easily asked of the author herself who offers her soap list address in the back of the book. I found this an extremely gracious thing to do and as person who signs my real name as opposed to being anonymous, I will say that this act does not sound like someone who willfully put out a poor book.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Review Summary: Great Book But "Fluffs" Over Some Topics
Review: I love the pictures and the way the information is presented and would buy it for that alone... I double checked some of the recipes and found the lye amounts to be correct. I especially liked the authors way of incorporating milk into hot processed soaps. I would definitely purchase this book again.... YET!!! I thought her introduction was a bit negative and less than motivating about the joys of soapmaking. Her comparison of Cold-Process to Hot-Process was a bit negative also. I also don't agree with the authors information about oils.. I feel there could have been more research done. She mentions that Olive Oil is a "neutral" oil... I definately don't agree! I have found it to be very "active" and conditioning. And, due to the low iodine content, Olive Oil effectively makes a rock hard bar upon curing. The Oil Characteristics guide was misleading to me also...A waste of my time. I have found Canola Oil to be highly conditioning to almost that of Olive Oil. There is very little mention of curing the soap. Crock Pot temperatures vary along with the abilities and experience of the individual soapmaker. Most hot-processors make soap and let it cure about a week, unless they've tested for neutrality. She doesn't mention a whole lot of testing for this or even viable PH ranges for handcrafted soap. Because of this, I question the ability to make the soap that day and use it later that same day. I would personally increase cooking time a bit to insure soap neutrality. But again this is all my opinion! I did like the book because there is so little out there focusing on the hot-process method. I would purchase this again, and feel it's one for the library, yet don't think it deserves the 5 stars because although an experienced soapmaker would be able to fill in the informational gaps, I wish there was just a bit more for the "new" soaper. I'm a tough judge yet still rated this book pretty darn good!

Customer Rating: Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5
Review Summary: Not pleased at all
Review: I have my concerns about this book. It was written by a soapmaker who invented a method, but does not, I allege, have the educational background to stand behind what she presents in the book. That is obvious in the written material.

The explanation of hot process would be best written by a chemist.

I also have picked up negativity from the author. This was not my choice for an informative hot process method. The information is readily available on the internet for free.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5
Review Summary: Superficial
Review: I returned this book.

Not that it isn't useful for beginners in the hot process method, and currently the only one available on hot processing methods. However, the subject was treated far too lightly for what could have been the definitive guide on HP methods. The same information has been available for years on the Internet, though without the very nice photos in the book. (Photos which, unfortunately, repeated themselves for the different methods shown).

What I expected the book to do, and didn't, was to answer the major questions associated with hot process, such as 1)How do you know when it is 'done'? 2) How do you add fragrance without flashoff or scent mutation problems associated with higher temperatures -'cooling the soap down' was mentioned, though without any useful details; and 3) How to get the much thicker hot process soap to mold properly without air bubbles. Tapping or banging the molds doesn't really work, especially if you have cooled the soap down to add fragrance. I also take exception to the idea that hot process is 'better' or more up-to-date than cold process. No, it's just a different way of doing things.

I wouldn't say this is a bad book. It just wasn't for me, as there is nothing in there that was new, insightful, or unique. Blame the author or the publisher for cutting down the text, but as it stands this book is all sizzle and no steak.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5
Review Summary: disappointed but not surprised
Review: Much of the info in this book is already available on the internet, and it is unfortunate that the author feels she is an expert on the subject. Her comments on oil qualities and what they do in soap are not backed up by any hard data (much less experience of other soapmakers), and I wish that she had at least consulted with a chemist who could elucidate some info on fatty acids and what they bring to the finished soap. You do not have to be a chemist much less a scientist to make soap, and this book is proof of that, but the author is clearly neither and unfortunately that comes through in approach and attitude.

I had problems outlined by others here, e.g. knowing when the soap is "done" cooking, how to deal with a batch that too much water cooked off from, getting rid of bubbles. Clearly, either you do it the author's way or you don't do it at all. That's a poor way to view one's students.

The attitude about HP vs. CP was overly defensive. A lot of us in the CP community awaited this book with baited breath because we'd never really gotten straight answers out of the author on the HP lists she runs, but the book was simply more of the same. Either one "gets it" and does HP and it comes out swell, or you're clearly messing up.

What I would recommend in lieu of this book is the Ann Bramson book and/or the second Susan Miller Cavitch book. At least the oils info is right on, the technique is okay, and if you're on the internet, you can find instructions for doing HP and adapt recipes accordingly.



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