Your choice of soap plays a critical role in
the health of your home. You want a soap that gets your hands, face, and body
clean without excessive drying and chemicals. Sadly, this eliminates most of
the commercially available soaps at your local store. However, with minimal
tools, a little DIY knowledge and a few essential oils, you can easily made
your own handmade
soap that cleans, hydrates, and smells amazing. 
A Quick Note About Making Handmade
Soap
Making your own soap seems hard, but it’s been
done for centuries in homes across the world. Every soap recipe requires lye, which can
be caustic so wear gloves when making soap to protect your hands. You’ll also
need glass and/or stainless steel mixing bowls, glass or metal jars, and an
instant read thermometer. When it comes to curing your soap, use silicone molds
or baking pans as they easily peel off your finished soap.
Basic Handmade Soap Recipe
Ingredients:
●     
⅔ cup coconut oil 
●     
⅔ cup olive oil 
●     
⅔ cup or liquid oil (like almond
oil, grapeseed, sunflower or safflower oils)
●     
¼ cup lye – (also called 100%
sodium hydroxide) 
●     
¾ cup cool, distilled or purified
water 
Directions:
- Cover your
     workspace with a protective layer or newspaper and put on your gloves and
     protective wear. 
- Measure your
     water into a 1 quart glass jar, and using your metal spoon, slowly add
     your lye into the water, stirring as you go. Stand back from the jar to
     avoid the fumes. Stir until the water clears up and the lye dissolves. 
- Using a
     glass pint jar, mix your 3 oils together and heat in the microwave for one
     minute until your oils are roughly 120°. Once your lye and your oils are
     between 95° and 105° you can move on to the next step. Getting the temps
     right is important, so don’t neglect this step.
- Once your
     oils and lye have reached the correct temp, pour the oils into a glass or
     stainless steel bowl before slowly stirring in your lye mixture. Once your
     lye is completely incorporated, stir for a full 5 minutes. Continue to
     stir until your mixture lightens and thickens, reaching roughly the
     consistency of vanilla pudding. This is what is known as “trace.” (Use this video to see what
     trace looks like.)
- Now add in
     your essential oils (see recipe combinations below) and stir until well
     combined. 
- Pour your
     soap into molds, covering them in plastic wrap before wrapping them in an
     old towel.
- 24 hours
     later, check your soap, if it’s hard and cool, you can turn it out to cure
     or cut it down to size. If it’s still warm and soft, let it sit for
     another 24-48 hours.
- Once turned
     out, your soap needs an additional 4 weeks to fully cure. Be sure to turn
     it every week to maximize air exposure.
3 Easy Fragrance Additions Using
Essential Oils
Essential oils are the best way to scent your
soap naturally, try these recipes! 
Lavender-Mint
Soap
Mix in 15 drops of lavender oil (like this one from Plant Therapy) and 5 drops of peppermint essential oil to your
soap.
Citrus
Sage Soap
Add in 10 drops of orange oil and 10 drops of clary
sage oil for a bright and uplifting fragrance.
Lemon
Rosemary Soap
Add in 12 drops of rosemary oil (we love this one from Simplers Botanicals) and 8 drops of
lemon oil for a lovely, fresh scent
all day long. 
Do you make your own soap? Tell us about it in
the comments section below! 
###
Photo by Viktor Forgacs on Unsplash

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