If I were to offer a set of sugar and/or salt scrubs made with locally grown fruits and veggies, would you be interested?
Here's the skinny:
--They would be available for a limited time only, as I want to use in-season produce for this line. I might (might!) be able to freeze enough produce for use in off-season product should they be in demand.
--Each batch would have either no preservative (the salt scrubs) or the minimum amount of broad-spectrum antimicrobials we could get away with.
--Each batch in its original form would be scented only with the produce in its recipe. However, your choice of available scent or essential oils could be added right before shipping.
--I would have to limit the shipping on these to the East Coast only, unless I bit the bullet and added preservative/antimicrobials to ALL batches. Subject to change as this little experiment plays out.
Thoughts?
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Long-Ago Promises
I told you guys a long while back that I would do a write-up on hosting your own soapmaker's home party, like the one John and I hosted last November. Well, I'm going to make good on that promise in the next several days. Writing normally is not this difficult for me, but for some reason it hasn't as naturally as usual. The hardest part has been trying to stick to the outline I've created and not get long-winded and boring.
Anyway, it will probably be a two-post series at least, if not three or more. Planning a shindig like this is a bit of an undertaking, and there's more involved than you might think.
Anyway, it will probably be a two-post series at least, if not three or more. Planning a shindig like this is a bit of an undertaking, and there's more involved than you might think.
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Soap Geeks of a Different Sort
Giving credit where credit is due. Digital Soaps on Etsy combines two of my favorite things: soap and video games.
For years I have tried to make something this awesome, but to no avail. From old school NES controllers to new-school Wiimotes, these people make washing up fun again.
(P.S.--They make soap replicas of other bits of techno-geekery, too.)
Monday, May 11, 2009
I almost forgot: I am now on Twitter. Come watch me be boring and mediocre in a new format. ;)
Username amandadadesky over there, if you're interested. That is all.
Username amandadadesky over there, if you're interested. That is all.
Announcement: Bar Soap Takes a Holiday
We are currently having problems keeping some of our from-scratch soapmaking materials from going rancid in the warehouse. I'm frantically re-ordering supplies as the funds become available and rearranging things so the new shipments will be better protected against temperature fluctuations.
All of this is going to take time. As such, the following bar soaps (in their current form) will be cut from the catalog for the time being:
-Sunny Disposition
-Oatmeal Cookie
-Vanilla Cake
-Rosewood & Amber
-French Lavender
-Aloe & Vitamin E
All of the above scents (with the exception of Aloe & Vitamin E), will be made available in the form of shaped soaps. For the unfamiliar, my shaped soaps are clear and opaque cold-process soap formulated to allow use in the melt & pour technique. It is made with the following ingredients:
Coconut Oil
Palm Oil
Safflower Oil
Glycerine (kosher, of vegetable origin)
Purified Water
Sodium Hydroxide (saponifying agent)
Sorbitol (moisturizer)
Sorbitan oleate (emulsifer)
Soy bean protein (conditioner)
Titanium Dioxide (mineral whitener used in opaque soaps)
Stay tuned for new updates as things develop.
All of this is going to take time. As such, the following bar soaps (in their current form) will be cut from the catalog for the time being:
-Sunny Disposition
-Oatmeal Cookie
-Vanilla Cake
-Rosewood & Amber
-French Lavender
-Aloe & Vitamin E
All of the above scents (with the exception of Aloe & Vitamin E), will be made available in the form of shaped soaps. For the unfamiliar, my shaped soaps are clear and opaque cold-process soap formulated to allow use in the melt & pour technique. It is made with the following ingredients:
Coconut Oil
Palm Oil
Safflower Oil
Glycerine (kosher, of vegetable origin)
Purified Water
Sodium Hydroxide (saponifying agent)
Sorbitol (moisturizer)
Sorbitan oleate (emulsifer)
Soy bean protein (conditioner)
Titanium Dioxide (mineral whitener used in opaque soaps)
Stay tuned for new updates as things develop.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Lots to Discuss
So I'd better get to it.
I know I have been quite absent from Internet life as of late. There is a reason for this, and I'm about to share it with you.
As many of you know, in June of 2008 I was able to finally procure a lab space outside of our house (well, barn) for the Panda. Not only did this make my productivity skyrocket, but the space was no-cost to me, as it was a barter arrangement. It was a win-win for the owner and myself. Well, in January of this year, the owner of the space got a paying offer on the place and I had to drag everything back up the road to our house. I know that this isn't a failure on my part or anything, but psychologically it was a very large blow.
Moving the Panda back into the house and out of its own lab space has been greatly detrimental to my overall productivity. In the last eight weeks I have found more and more things on my to-do list have been falling to the wayside simply because there is not enough time or room. Chores go half-finished or untouched. Orders are taking longer and longer to fill due to the limited space. Meals have mostly been haphazard and last-minute, meaning lots of frozen meals and pizza. I haven't seen the floor in my office for nearly a month, there's so many piles of paperwork (both personal and business) stacked up in there.
All of this has finally forced me to make a decision that has been a long time coming: I'm going to have to cut some things from the Panda's catalog, specifically certain varieties of hot-process soap. It is not a decision I make lightly; I know a lot of you love my soap bars, but there just aren't enough hours in the day for me to keep up with all the current soap varieties AND introduce new ones that have cleared the R&D stage. Also, they aren't selling as well as they used to be, thanks in no small part to my curious aptitude for making cute little shaped soaps. (As an example, most of our Christmas sales this year were for the shaped soaps rather than full bars. Nearly 89%, if I remember correctly.)
It just makes fiscal (and mental) sense to change the catalog a bit. I'm not going to be a soaper forever, so I may as well do what works well while the gumption is still there. Besides, the shaped soaps allow me more creative freedom, and that is something I desperately need right now to appease my inner yeti.
I really hope you guys won't hate me for this. As soon as I have decided what products will be going away, you lot will be the first to know.
Another reason for my online hiatus this quarter was due to personal ailments (my eczema reared its ugly head after YEARS of leaving me in peace AND I busted my right foot), home and office improvements (we now have an ACTUAL ceiling in the barn!) and two deaths in the family. I do not remember if I mentioned this here, but one of our beloved fur-kids, Shaina the Peik-a-poo, died of a heart attack while we were away for the Christmas holidays. If you all remember the last time we attempted to take a vacation, you'll know why I am beginning to think that we are just not supposed to travel to Florida.
The other dearly departed family member was my Great-Aunt Mickey. She finally succumbed to her long battle with cancer early this year. Putting her affairs in order has been an epic adventure, involving lawyers and family members from three different states. I've typed up so many letters and read over so many documents my eyeballs are in danger of giving up the ghost in protest. For all that, most of what she had will most likely be liquidated to pay her outstanding medical bills, and that's just fine by me. I would rather her more immediate family be freed of the burden of debt than to see a penny of it for myself.
So, dear readers, I'm back. We are gearing up for Carolina Spirit Quest in April and we will be there with bells on. Beyond that, we are currently only committed to Central Carolina Pagan Pride Day. There will be other shows, but as of right now nothing is set in stone.
All that said, life is not too shabby. Now if the weather here in North Carolina would just make up its mind, things would be golden. . .
I know I have been quite absent from Internet life as of late. There is a reason for this, and I'm about to share it with you.
As many of you know, in June of 2008 I was able to finally procure a lab space outside of our house (well, barn) for the Panda. Not only did this make my productivity skyrocket, but the space was no-cost to me, as it was a barter arrangement. It was a win-win for the owner and myself. Well, in January of this year, the owner of the space got a paying offer on the place and I had to drag everything back up the road to our house. I know that this isn't a failure on my part or anything, but psychologically it was a very large blow.
Moving the Panda back into the house and out of its own lab space has been greatly detrimental to my overall productivity. In the last eight weeks I have found more and more things on my to-do list have been falling to the wayside simply because there is not enough time or room. Chores go half-finished or untouched. Orders are taking longer and longer to fill due to the limited space. Meals have mostly been haphazard and last-minute, meaning lots of frozen meals and pizza. I haven't seen the floor in my office for nearly a month, there's so many piles of paperwork (both personal and business) stacked up in there.
All of this has finally forced me to make a decision that has been a long time coming: I'm going to have to cut some things from the Panda's catalog, specifically certain varieties of hot-process soap. It is not a decision I make lightly; I know a lot of you love my soap bars, but there just aren't enough hours in the day for me to keep up with all the current soap varieties AND introduce new ones that have cleared the R&D stage. Also, they aren't selling as well as they used to be, thanks in no small part to my curious aptitude for making cute little shaped soaps. (As an example, most of our Christmas sales this year were for the shaped soaps rather than full bars. Nearly 89%, if I remember correctly.)
It just makes fiscal (and mental) sense to change the catalog a bit. I'm not going to be a soaper forever, so I may as well do what works well while the gumption is still there. Besides, the shaped soaps allow me more creative freedom, and that is something I desperately need right now to appease my inner yeti.
I really hope you guys won't hate me for this. As soon as I have decided what products will be going away, you lot will be the first to know.
Another reason for my online hiatus this quarter was due to personal ailments (my eczema reared its ugly head after YEARS of leaving me in peace AND I busted my right foot), home and office improvements (we now have an ACTUAL ceiling in the barn!) and two deaths in the family. I do not remember if I mentioned this here, but one of our beloved fur-kids, Shaina the Peik-a-poo, died of a heart attack while we were away for the Christmas holidays. If you all remember the last time we attempted to take a vacation, you'll know why I am beginning to think that we are just not supposed to travel to Florida.
The other dearly departed family member was my Great-Aunt Mickey. She finally succumbed to her long battle with cancer early this year. Putting her affairs in order has been an epic adventure, involving lawyers and family members from three different states. I've typed up so many letters and read over so many documents my eyeballs are in danger of giving up the ghost in protest. For all that, most of what she had will most likely be liquidated to pay her outstanding medical bills, and that's just fine by me. I would rather her more immediate family be freed of the burden of debt than to see a penny of it for myself.
So, dear readers, I'm back. We are gearing up for Carolina Spirit Quest in April and we will be there with bells on. Beyond that, we are currently only committed to Central Carolina Pagan Pride Day. There will be other shows, but as of right now nothing is set in stone.
All that said, life is not too shabby. Now if the weather here in North Carolina would just make up its mind, things would be golden. . .
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Up to My Old Tricks
Every time I clean, I somehow always think back to when I was a professional nanny and housekeeper. Sometimes, it leaves me wistful. "You know, I really miss that family. I wonder how they are doing?"
Other times, I feel relieved that the Panda is generating as much business as it has been. "Good grief, no amount of money in the world would be enough to make me go back to that house!"
However, I do not regret any of those experiences. Strange, how the mind works.
Anyway, this post was brought to you by the fact that I am heading down to the lab to give it a proper scrubbing, check all the equipment to make sure it is clean and ready to go, and gather up a laundry-load's worth of towels, rags and aprons that need to be cleaned before I can begin working on soap.
By comparison, soy candles take much less work in the way of sanitizing tools and work space than other products I make. The containers need to be double-checked for debris and cleaned out if necessary, but I clean all of the pouring pots and measuring cups after every use. (Warm wax is MUCH easier to clean than cold wax. Period.) These items do NOT go in the sanitizing dishwasher, so they have to be cleaned as soon as they are used.
However, soap takes longer to make, plus I toss most of the tools into the dishwasher until I have a full load, then run it. Given all that, it is best to clean the lab first, then get down to brass tacks. Speaking of which, do I even have all the outstanding orders printed out? I'd better go check on that.
Later days. ;)
P.S.--I'm still working on the "How to Throw Your Own Home Party" entries. They might not get posted until I am in Orlando, which won't be until December 14th. (Which, coincidentally, happens to be mine and John's first wedding anniversary. We're spoiling each other rotten with a trip to Orlando before we invade Miami to see his family for Christmas. We'll call it a working holiday. *wink*)
Other times, I feel relieved that the Panda is generating as much business as it has been. "Good grief, no amount of money in the world would be enough to make me go back to that house!"
However, I do not regret any of those experiences. Strange, how the mind works.
Anyway, this post was brought to you by the fact that I am heading down to the lab to give it a proper scrubbing, check all the equipment to make sure it is clean and ready to go, and gather up a laundry-load's worth of towels, rags and aprons that need to be cleaned before I can begin working on soap.
By comparison, soy candles take much less work in the way of sanitizing tools and work space than other products I make. The containers need to be double-checked for debris and cleaned out if necessary, but I clean all of the pouring pots and measuring cups after every use. (Warm wax is MUCH easier to clean than cold wax. Period.) These items do NOT go in the sanitizing dishwasher, so they have to be cleaned as soon as they are used.
However, soap takes longer to make, plus I toss most of the tools into the dishwasher until I have a full load, then run it. Given all that, it is best to clean the lab first, then get down to brass tacks. Speaking of which, do I even have all the outstanding orders printed out? I'd better go check on that.
Later days. ;)
P.S.--I'm still working on the "How to Throw Your Own Home Party" entries. They might not get posted until I am in Orlando, which won't be until December 14th. (Which, coincidentally, happens to be mine and John's first wedding anniversary. We're spoiling each other rotten with a trip to Orlando before we invade Miami to see his family for Christmas. We'll call it a working holiday. *wink*)
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