How To Color Cold Process Soap: by Amanda Gail
How To Color Cold Process Soap: by Amanda Gail
How To Color Cold Process Soap: by Amanda Gail
n Troubleshooting
n This can also affect swirls. You might create a soap with a
crisp swirl using different colors. When you come back to it a
day or week later, the swirls have bled into each other,
creating a muddied soap.
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pH Sensitivity
n The usage rate is how much of a colorant you can use in cold
process soap.
n Make sure that the oxides you purchase are suitable for
cosmetic use. There are commercial-use oxides, which are
not as pure—or—powdered enough for cosmetic use. Here
are some oxides that you’ll find from suppliers.
n Yellow Oxide
n Red Oxide
n Black Oxide
n Brown Oxide
n Chromium (Green) Oxide
n Hydrated Chromium (Teal Green) Oxide
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Ultramarines
n Colors produced: Shades of pink, blue and purple.
n If you are making a swirled soap, you can add each color to
thinly traced soap. I personally add the pigment dry in a
scoop on top of the surface. I then place my stick blender
right on top of the scoop of colorant, push down and pulse
quickly.
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n Ultramarine Violet
n Hydrated
Chromium (Teal
Green) Oxide
n Chromium (Green)
Oxide
n Ultramarine Blue
n Yellow Oxide
n Brown Oxide
n Mica comes in tiny flakes; the bigger the flake, the more
surface area for light to reflect, which creates more sparkle.
n If you are making a swirled soap, you can add each color to
emulsified or thinly traced soap.
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Usage Rates for Cold Process
Soap
n 1 teaspoon per pound of soapmaking oils. Use less if you
desire a lighter color and use more if you desire a darker,
more saturated color.
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Cosmetic Pigments
n Bis(Glycidoxyphenyl)propane / Bisaminomethylnorbornane
copolymer, Aluminum Hydroxide (CI 77002), Ext D&C Violet No.
2 (CI 60730), D&C Red No. 28 (CI45410)
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Reborn Purple (TKB)
n Copolymer
n Polyester -3
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Cosmetic Pigments
n Colors produced: A rainbow of colors.
n They do contain dyes, but since they are coated with plastics,
the dyes do not dissolve and tint the mixture (hence, no color
bleed).
n If you are making a swirled soap, you can add each color to
thinly traced soap.
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Usage Rates for Cold Process
Soap
n Dry pigment - 1 teaspoon per pound of soapmaking oils.
Use less if you desire a lighter color.
n Color fading: Dyes and Lakes are color sensitive and can
fade.
n Dyes and lakes are great for melt & pour soap and other bath
products such as bath salts and bath bombs where you want
the colorant to completely dissolve in the bath water.
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Cosmetic Clays
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Herbs and Spices
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Mixing Custom Colors
n You can expand your color collection by mixing colorants,
especially by mixing colorants with either white or black to
lighten or darken.
n 1/2 tsp Voodoo Mica (Mad Oils) + 1/2 tsp White Mica PPO
n 1 tsp Voodoo Mica PPO
n 1/2 tsp Voodoo Mica + 1/4 tsp Charcoal PPO
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n 1/4 tsp Mermaid Blue Mica (Bramble Berry) + 1/2 tsp White Mica
PPO
n 1 tsp Mermaid Blue Mica PPO
n 1/4 tsp Mermaid Blue Mica + 1/4 tsp Charcoal PPO
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Remember the color wheel?
n When you’re shopping for fragrance oils and you come across
Vanilla Bean, Warm Sugar, Pink Sugar, Buttercream Cupcake,
Coconut…just be aware that these will probably turn your soap
cream to brown.
n There are products called vanilla color stabilizers that you can
purchase from soap suppliers. They are typically for melt and
pour soap and do not work in cold process soap. (4-6 months
and your soap will turn brown anyways.
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Goat Milk and Color
n When soaping with goat milk (powder or fresh), your soap
will usually turn out cream in color. This can affect the
colorants that you’re using.
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Base Oils and Color
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