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LuminousBoutique

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Everything posted by LuminousBoutique

  1. yeeep.. I use wood molds so yeah, pour... let sit 12ish hours (kinds depends on the recipe), slice and let cure 4 weeks min. but some take longer. I let my castile which is just olive oil, water, and lye cure for 6 months. I want to try HP sometime because I am intrigued by the idea of using it right away!
  2. ^ what she said... did you pour it into the mold? Some of my CP takes longer to trace than others but creamy and thickened is what you want. Kinda like a thin pudding
  3. Yeah the sprinkles are cute! I stole the idea from the cupcake bath bombs I see on etsy all the time.. so adorable. My experience is people shop with their eyes first, nose second, and common sense last.. so I am trying to make my soaps "prettier" lol. I love those brownie pans, they are great for massage melts too... I am a massage therapist (although let my license lapse so I dont practice) and one of those is the perfect amount for one massage.
  4. they have these great little plastic caps that pop right in, there in the PVC section at the hardware store.. I used those. I lined them with plastic wrap first so they wouldnt get stuck
  5. The M&P question ... I dont have any experience with it personally but I would think you couldnt add too much liquid to it without it not setting up properly. I know some people add goats milk and additional oils though, so I would use the search feature to see what you can find about adding liquids to M&P.. its a great resource. And with all things you wont know until you test im sure. as for beer soap from scratch.. there is no such thing as soap without lye. No Lye, no soap. If theres no lye, its a synthetic detergent, not soap. M&P soap was made with lye too.. its just hidden in the ingredients. Some label it as "Sodium Hydroxide", NaOh, KOH (Potassium Hydroxide - for liquid soaps), Caustic Soda, Soda Lye, White Caustic, or "Saponified Coconut Oil"... if it says "Saponified" its been mixed with lye.
  6. Michaels! They were 50% off so I grabbed two of them.. they work great for candle tarts too. The finished mini's weigh about .7oz
  7. Here it is now... almost exactly 24 hours after pouring, and 10 hours after cutting.
  8. took a pic for you since I'm uploading new stuff anyways- This is actually the NEW packaging.. no pic of the old one but its basically the same except the green label and green lid.
  9. right next to the olive oil usually, its called LouAna and the packaging is changing from a white plastic container with a green lid and green label to white plastic container with black and orange label and black lid. Here its 4.95 per container.
  10. I had to freeze my 2' pvc tube, place a rag over the top of a jar of pasta sauce that fit in the tube, place the jar on the ground, and pound down on the jar about ten billion times before my soap finally slid out. I used 6 layers of freezer paper but just a TINY bit of soap eeked out and the whole thing was stuck because of it. eventually it squeezed out but it was a bit like labor! something I never want to do again!! lol. How long is your PVC? I cut mine down to 1' sections after that and havent tested them since because I'm inaftuated with the log molds my husband built me... but I've heard that helps alot. I've also heard of people using silpat (silicone baking sheet liners) to line their PVC pipes and they swear it slides right out
  11. thank you, I'll have to look into that! I dont mind it.. but I want to learn new techniques in color
  12. AH I cant believe I didnt think of that! :embarasse Its very heavy on Vanilla, LOL i can be a dope sometimes! thank you... That makes perfect sense. It is full on brown now.. looks really nice and consistent. I guess I was confused just because it started on the top and I let myself freak out about it instead of let the soap do its thing... Thanks again!!
  13. out of everything said this I think is the most important This is a hobby you want to make into a business.. thats awesome, thats what we all should look for in life! BUT...Personally? I dont make a profit, its almost impossible to make a profit right away! never have, probably wont for a very long time. selling supports my candle and soap habit, and it keeps me happy. It gives me something to do other than just be a stay at home mom. Some years I dont even do any shows, last year I only did one! And insurance isnt cheap. You'll pay between $200-1000 a year. That being said, no matter how many or how few candles I sell, I ALWAYS have insurance in place. Why? Because Average Joe can take your candle home, set it on a stack of papers, let his cat tip it over, and set fire to his house. your fault? not really. But guess who gets sued over it? YOU. Average Joe could forget (or not know) to trim the wick and set a potential candle flamethrower on his antique furniture, drip some wax, shatter the container, smoke up his curtains... whatever. Doesnt matter. You are liable for any and all of it if Average Joe has the right lawyer. Same goes for soap making. Someone could be allergic to an ingredient or fragrance in my soaps, and sue me.. despite all warning labels and testing recommendations I give. It doesn’t matter if I suggest they test the frag before using it or how many times we label to keep it away from eyes.. if they burn their eyes, they can still attempt to sue me. I am thousands of dollars, and hundreds of test candles into it and I've only found one container (the square mason) one wick combo, and 20 scents I am confident selling as of yet. Thats after HUNDREDS of test candles/scents/jars. When I see people at shows selling poorly tested candles, who know very little about their craft and are simply selling them to make money... yes, it makes me a bit grumpy! Because that DOES reflect on all of us. People remember that one time they bought a soy handmade candle and it wasnt "strong enough, big enough, burn long enough... and so on.." and they dont remember who sold it all the time, but it stops them from coming back for more handmade candles. They think... why not just buy one at Wamart, Hobby Lobby, or Yankee? I dont (and I know nobody else) say any of this to be harsh.. we all help eachother out here, I've asked stupid questions.. we all have. I've asked questions that you could easily find the answer to (Thankfully Stella was SUPER helpful when I first joined and showed me how to properly use the search feature! thanks Stella!) But part of helping eachother out is being honest... You can easily get in over your head, waste epic amounts of time and money, and ruin your reputation as a candle maker all at once. Now. This is all just our word and you dont have to take it.. but the true success of business is repeat customers and nobody is going to return to buy a candle they werent satisfied with. And I agree its OK to figure out pricing before you are ready to sell... my formula is pretty simple... supplies x3. And adjust for market conditions. Sometimes I'm willing to sell for less to sell more, or sell for more to sell less depending on who the clientele is. (for example some boutiques you can get away with charging WAAAAAY more per candle than at a craft show) so example being (total example not based on any real numbers)... per candle: jar 1.00, wax .50, scent 1.00, wick .10... I would charge 7.80 at least for that candle. You also need to consider labels, time, packaging, effort, testing, travel (if its a show), and competition. I wish you all the luck in the world, keep working at it, have fun with it.. but dont rush yourself. All I wanted to do when I started out was sell sell sell but looking back now I see how dangerous that could have been. Dont give up.. dont think anyone here is being mean.. I'm just doing my absolute best to make sure you are informed.
  14. I have a few Q's for you lovely people... I have made EO CP soap for years but I've never used FO's.. I decided it was about time and pulled some out but I'm seeing some things I never have before in my soaps so I wanted some of you guys to take a peek and tell me what you think. I made a small batch.. 42oz of oils, used my "grocery store" oil recipe since it was a tester (Olive, Coconut, Canola, Sunflower, Soybean, Sweet Almond, Castor), 4oz of Buttercream FO (I used 1oz PP of Oils, not PP of recipe.. and then added an ounce because this buttercream (candle source) smelled weak compared to my normal brand (candle science)) and sprinkled nonpariels (sp?) on top after I swirled my logs top. 1st.... color! It turned YELLOW... we're talking smiley face yellow. I've never seen that before, I've had my soaps go brown because of sugars but not like this. On the top, where my sprinkles are, it turned brown in gel and never went back. I'm assuming its because of the sugar from the little candies but wonderd if anyone had any experience with this and if it fades? You'll see in the pics its quite the color difference! 2nd.... scent. I always use 1oz PP of oils when I use EO.. but I had no experience with the FO so I just did the same thing. Its a bit weak but I know it will change with cure... how much do you guys usually use? here are the pics... I hope the brown on top lightens up. My little mini's that I pour into a silicone brownie pan turned out adorable, cant wait to send those out as samples in a few weeks! I hope it attracts a new group of buyers because I've never messed with color or FO's and I think its about time to do some fun soaps! First pic: I did a loaf of 100% castile too.. I do a 30% water reduc and it cures hard as a brick by week 4 but I let it cure for 4 months. You can see my minis are more yellow still, but dont have the brown on top... Pic two.. loaf before cutting. its REALLY brown on top.. Pic three.. cut loaf.. Pic five.. my minis... they are so cute! I am SO happy with how they came out.
  15. Nope... Potassium bitartrate, also known as potassium hydrogen tartrate, has formula KC4H5O6. It is a byproduct of winemaking. In cooking it is known as cream of tartar. It is the potassium acid salt of tartaric acid, a carboxylic acid. Potassium bitartrate crystallises in wine casks during the fermentation of grape juice, and can precipitate out of wine in bottle. This crude form (known as beeswing) is collected and purified to produce the white, odorless, acidic powder used for many culinary and other household purposes.
  16. hehe.. I was giggling too.. I used to have to handle way too much alfalfa on the farm back in the day so I'm pretty familiar with it.. my husband goes "who would want to smell that? its like a barn!" EXACTLY! Well.. I cant blame him. hes a city boy. He just doesnt get it! I love that smell... good luck Sorcha, let us know how it smells!!
  17. nm... i was thinking tart burners not candle warmers. I think i've seen them at Dollar General, but I'm not 100% sure thats where it was.
  18. good to know... I might buy up a few warmers with the 40% off coupons week by week because its on my way to the store.. then I could have them in my market booth to sell as a bundle/gift basket
  19. ooh good find! I dont do M&P but I bet this would work wonderfully with CP too. I'll have to go see if they have them at my target as well!
  20. They are adorable! I dont do wickless for my shop but these look like something I could do for my own personal use because I always have leftover wax and I dont always want to mess with pouring tealights with the leftover. I think the shooter name is cute, too. It might not appeal to all people but I think it is easy to recognise why its called that and they do totally look like jello shots!
  21. Wow... nope I havent seen them there.. I'll have to look again the next time I go. I can imagine they would be a mess with everyone opening them to smell.
  22. The website looks great to me! As for storage.. I'm right there with you. I keep them in the box the containers shipped in as well, for now. We're renovating our big walk in closet in our guest room and will have proper shelving for everything someday.. but for now thats my only option. I can tell you we're kinda lucky to have an IKEA close by because we are using their shelving options... The "GORM" shelving unit is under $30, really easy to assemble, and you can buy extra shelves for it. So we are going to have the shelves staggered to the right height for one candle, and line them up scent by scent. We already use one as a drying/curing rack for soap, so we just need another for curing/drying candles, and another for storage. The three of them together will take up about all of that room but for under $100 we will have all the storage we need and nothings permanent.
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