Candle & Soap Making

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Thanksgiving Candles & Centerpieces

Looking for innovative, easy and fun ways to add some natural interest and light to your holiday candle centerpiece? This tea lite lantern, made from a carved out squash is a lovely, yet easy candle making project.

Other Autumn Candle & Soap Projects

David's Candles & Soap Blog

The Last Great Place on Earth

Wednesday November 19, 2008
Image Copyright © Ian Beeby - http://homepage.mac.com/ibeebyA new hotel with a wonderful luxury spa has opened.Their spa philosophy is "Ancient people have lived in balance with the rhythms of nature and have understood that each person is a unique combination of elements with individual needs at different times." Sounds cool, huh? And very much in line with our increasing attention, as soap and candle makers, to surrounding ourselves with pure and natural things, and treating our senses, bodies and minds with care. But this spa isn't in Santa Fe or San Francisco, it's in Mongolia. Located 50 kilometers north of the capital city of Ulaanbaatar, the Terelj Hotel bills itself as the "Last Great Place on Earth." I wish I had more frequent flier miles, because it sounds really neat. "There is a place on earth, as yet significantly unspoiled by Western Civilization. A protected place, where travelers have only been freely granted access since 1992. Today, deep inside a national park, on the banks of a historic river and under the watchful eye of some of the most beautiful mountains in the world, you can experience this place. In utmost comfort and style."
So if you happen to be in China, Russia or Mongolia, drop on by...it sounds like a lovely place. For those of us on the other side of the world, we'll have to work on creating "utmost comfort and style" with some of our own hand crafted soap, custom candles, bath salts, massage bars and such.
Photo credit: ibeeby at stock.xchng

Candles as an Outlet for Healing and a Business

Monday November 17, 2008
I've passed on a lot of links to articles about candle makers who have overcome illnesses, poverty and other obstacles by and through making candles and soap. This is one of those. Perhaps it's just because I'm the parent of a toddler, and can relate to the experimenting with candles in between diaper changes...but this one really touched me. It's the story of Lisa Chavez of Willow Wicks Candle and Spa Products. The article tells how Lisa got started making and selling candles, and how her greatest inspiration, her daughter Breann, fought Niemann-Pick disease. Though Breann has passed on, Lisa looks "to her candle making as a release and a way to honor her daughter's memory. She was the spark of Willow Wicks, and it is in her spirit the flame burns today," she says.
Photo credit: mmgallan at Stock.XCHNG

What Type of Soaper (or Chandler) are You?

Tuesday November 11, 2008
Inspired by a post on Kathy Miller's Soap site (one of the oldest and best soap sites on the internet) - What Type of Soaper Are You?
The Naturalist?
The Expense Artist
The Latherist?
The Country Wrapper?
The Sofa Soaper?
These and dozens more are on the site. You'll chuckle...and more than likely find a soaper that you fit.
Be sure to scroll down about half way for the "You might be a soap addict if..." section...hilarious!

Then...click on the "Comment" link here and tell us what sort of soaper YOU are!

Your Only Limit is Your Soul

Friday November 7, 2008
woman cookingAt first read, I loved this article about Bob McElwee and his soap. I can imagine him in his impeccably neat soap kitchen, with perfectly measured batches and bars that look exactly the same. I'm sure glad Bob isn't watching over my shoulder while I make my own soap though. I'd be afraid to make an error! As it relates in the article about Bob and the Loveland Soap Company, he takes careful measuring and consistency from batch to batch very seriously! (The article says his scale measures to a thousandth of an ounce. Yikes!) "A lot of people who try to make soap are merely cooks," he says. "They think it's a pinch of this and a pinch of that. It's not like that at all." Well...I'm not so sure about that. I bet a lot of readers here would disagree. Yes, careful measuring, especially with lye, which is far more dangerous than flour, sugar and eggs, is vitally important, but I don't think he gives cooks enough credit. I doubt Peggy Trowbridge Filippone, the Guide to Home Cooking at About.com would say she just throws in a pinch of this and that without any attention to accuracy. And neither do I.
Hmmpf.
As I think about it some more, I don't love this article so much anymore. The problem with this article is that it makes soap making sound difficult and dangerous...something that you can only do if your kitchen "looks like a computer lab" or you own "laboratory glassware" or you pay "$30 an ounce" for essential oils. It makes it sound like something that can't be done by any of us "mere cooks" (male or female!) Yes...you have to be careful and measure correctly. No...you can't just whistle your way through a batch of soap not paying attention to what goes into it. But with a little bit of information, a little bit of patience, a little bit of creativity, and a few cheap pieces of cookware from the dollar store, anyone CAN make soap. I have soap makers from all over the world write me and relate how much they love making soap. Male and female, old and young. Educated, not educated, disabled, poor, rich. Talking to these soap makers, I often feel like Chef Gusteau in the movie Ratatouille when he says, "You must be imaginative, strong-hearted. You must try things that may not work, and you must not let anyone define your limits because of where you come from. Your only limit is your soul. What I say is true - anyone can cook... but only the fearless can be great." So what do you say? Yes, put your darn goggles and gloves on when you're mixing your lye. And after that, whether your soap kitchen looks like a science lab or a artist's studio...let's be fearless and make some great soap! (Or candles - I don't mean to leave you candle folks out - but Bob doesn't make candles!)
Illustration: Paul Gilligan / Getty Images

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