Thursday, 23 July 2009

The Benefits Of Learning How To Make Soap At Home

By Jen Hopkins

There is no reason to buy soap at the store when you could be making your own soap of better quality at home. When you make your own soap, you are the one choosing what goes into the soap, and preventing beneficial ingredients from being removed.

Soap manufacturers rip you off by taking out the good, moisturizing ingredients, like glycerine, which means that using their soap actually makes your skin dryer and less healthy. They hope that if you use their soap, you will have to buy their other products as well to counteract the negative effects. Making your own soap is a smart decision for your household budget.

If you use a proper method for how to make soap, you can shave off the cost of buying expensive department store soaps that do the same thing. There are plenty of easy soap making projects out there and once you get the hang of it, you will probably never have to shop for soap again.

In addition to saving money, your homemade soaps can be great gifts to give to friends and family. Or you can have a soap party where you teach your friends and family how to make soap so that they can design and create their own individual soap bars. The process is not recommended to teach to children, however, because there are acids involved that could be harmful.

The basics of soapmaking are very simple, requiring just a few ingredients. Lye, oil and animal fats bind together to make soap in a process called saponification. It's very important to wear protective gloves during the process, though - lye can burn your skin!

The necessary ingredients - oil, lye and molds to shape them - and books with lots and lots of ideas are all at your local craft store, just waiting for you. Once you learn how to make one kind of soap, it's easy and inexpensive to get little oils and different shapes so that you'll never make the same batch of soap twice!

You may find that getting back to nature is exactly what your skin needs and you donat have to buy expensive organic products to do it if you know how to make your own. Making your own soap can be beneficial for the rest of your family as well, especially if someone is allergic or has sensitive skin. Many commercial soaps are perfumed and actually irritate the skin and provoke allergic reactions.

When you make soap, you are being both creative and useful. It's likely that you will find your homemade soap to be better for your skin than the soap you used to buy at the store, because you are in control of what goes in and what comes out of the soap. The opportunities for the fun and creativity know no bounds!

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