Speed up the process.
Best way to cut cold process soap.
Most people choose to cut their soaps into a one inch thickness.
Depending on how firm it is i will go ahead and slice it into one inch thick bars.
The two sides of your soap cutter should be cut to measure 6 1 2 long by 5 high.
Whether the soap has a bit of soda ash or uneven edges there are several tricks to making each and every bar picture perfect.
At this point the soap should cut smoothly without crumbling.
Unfortunately not every batch comes straight out of the mold this way.
This will make your soap harden up a little faster and cure out earlier.
Now about your choices of tools to use for how to cut homemade soap.
The front stop which keeps your soap from sliding out to ensure bars are all cut the same size should measure 5 long by 2 high.
The longer it sits the harder and milder it will become.
First you have to decide how wide you want your bars of soap to be.
Soap makers have all kinds of ideas about items to use when it comes to cutting homemade soap.
Make your soap one day and then make sure you can cut it the next.
Cold process soap is made without any external heat applied to it while hot process soap is most often cooked in a crockpot to speed up the soapmaking process.
Place your soaps in an out of the way place to cure.
Inscriptions on the cylinders described a process of fats boiled with ashes the world s first soap making method but the babylonians weren t the only ones who benefited.
For more in depth information 60 palm free recipes helpful charts plus a private facebook support group check out my natural soapmaking ebook collection.
It s a time tested technique.
Most soaps need 4 or more weeks to cure or to complete the saponification process during which fats water and lye turn into soap.
Some use guitar strings the wire ones.
Once i make a batch of soap i unmold it after 24 hours.
While soap will form bubbles within the first 24 hours that doesn t mean it s done.
If it is still soft and sticky i will wait another day or two before slicing.
The art of soap making can be traced as far back as ancient babylon when archaeologists during an excavation first discovered a soap material inside clay cylinders dating as early as 2800 b c.