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300 Handcrafted Soaps: Great Melt & Pour Projects
 
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300 Handcrafted Soaps: Great Melt & Pour Projects [Paperback]

Marie Browning (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 28, 2003
“A continuation of the projects found in Browning’s Melt & Pour Soapmaking, using commercially available soap bases. ...There are also lovely molded soaps that one would hate to destroy by using. All of these soaps can be made using kitchen equipment, and no lye or animal fat is used in the process. Browning’s books are always great additions to public libraries.”—Library Journal.


Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

This is a continuation of the projects found in Browning's Melt & Pour Soapmaking, using commercially available soap bases. This book emphasizes soap made with additives such as essential oils, botanicals, spices, and even chocolate. There are also lovely molded soaps that one would hate to destroy by using. All of these soaps can be made using kitchen equipment, and no lye or animal fat is used in the process. Browning's books are always great additions to public libraries.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Marie Browning's articles and designs have appeared in Handcraft Illustrated, Better Homes & Gardens, Canadian Stamper, Great American Crafts, All American Crafts, and in numerous project books. She is the author of four other books published by Sterling, Beautiful Handmade Nautral Soaps; Handcrafted Journals, Albums, Scrapbooks, & More (0806922672); Making Glorious Gifts from the Garden (0806925159), and Memory Gifts (0806939338).

Product Details

  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Sterling (October 28, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1402707975
  • ISBN-13: 978-1402707971
  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 8.4 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #518,108 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

22 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

84 of 84 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Melt & Pour Soapcrafting Book For All Levels, October 17, 2002
Whether you're a beginner or an expert soapcrafter, 300 HANDCRAFTED SOAPS by Marie Browning is definitely a must-have for your library. If you craft melt & pour and are low on ideas, you'll be inspired after just the quickest look through this book. The photographs are stunning, and I'm sure this will be mentioned in all reviews. Almost all of the 300 recipes have accompanying pictures and this is necessary for such an eye-catching craft. Ironically, the one photo that could have been improved is the cover shot---the background is a bit too dark to effectively highlight the soaps.

This book is up-to-date as the author mentions more than her standard coconut oil, clear or opaque glycerin melt & pour bases. Olive oil, avocado and cucumber, goat's milk, colored, and the newer frosting bases are described and pictured. Marie Browning offers helpful suggestions for selecting QUALITY soap bases and her advice is very important for those beginners who tend to buy whatever's on sale or available. Without a decent soapbase you might as well just go on using commercial soap found in your local grocery or drug store, which is notorious for being loaded with synthetic ingredients. As the author of a book about melt & pour soap and a soapcrafter for several years, I've learned that you must read the ingredients. If doing business with an Internet based soap supplier, ask for the soap base ingredients if not already listed on the site. If the supplier refuses this request, don't do business with them as they probably have a low-grade soap base.

Ms. Browning has sections on aromatherapy, fragrances, and what makes safe additives such as herbs, spices and oils, along with a few cautions. She can be ultra conservative in her warnings: "Avoid all essential oils, natural herbal products, and salt baths during pregnancy." But she's also straightforward about using alcohol to spray on soap to avoid bubbles and adhere layers preferring to "wait until a skin forms; I then carefully remove the skin with a knife." This is the most effective method I've learned over the years.

For those looking to explore the boundaries of hand-milled [sometimes called rebatch] soapcrafting, you'll be advised to purchase a copy of her earlier book, BEAUTIFUL HANDMADE SOAPS. Ms. Browning's latest offering is for melt & pour soapcrafters only! Her recipes can be adapted to hand-milled soap however. She has a handy chart comparing hand-milled and melt & pour [also known as M&P]. I laughed when I read of her advice to use M&P soap within three months as it loses its fragrance and "colorants migrate." I think her usage of fragrances, her method is to measure by drops and she doesn't indicate whether it's a fragrance oil or essential oil as she believes it's the soapcrafter's decision, is minuscule. Admittedly, some colors can be problematic, fading or bleeding in the soap and making a mess. In moderately or uncolored soaps I've personally made, there have been some bars last for over 1 year and still smell as fragrant as they were when removed from the molds. Not mentioned in this book is the fact that even M&P should cure [harden] for a few days rather than be used instantly.

It's refreshing to see the evolution of her soaps as her 1998 recipes for soap pebbles have evolved into truly spectacular and authentic looking gems. The lemon, lime, and orange slices are also better looking than what was shown in her earliest soapcrafting book.

Marie Browning has concocted so many new recipes that I'd recommend a person look at the photographs first, then go back and match the photo numbers with the recipes. A few new categories include: bagged soaps, fizzy soaps, carved soaps, dip-dot painted soaps, shampoo and scrub bars, and soap sweets-well, the author's imagination is all-encompassing. When she cautions you to label your soap, please take her advice. Some of the pictures look like they belong in a dessert cookbook!

With the holiday season fast approaching, you'd better hurry up and order this book so you have time to make some of these wonderful recipes to give as gifts. But the best part about soapcrafting is that it's an inexpensive hobby that can be done year-round because there's always a forthcoming holiday, and people always use soap!

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64 of 65 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Finally! A melt and pour book worth looking at., September 13, 2002
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I am a sucker for gorgeously photographed books. This may have something to do with my five star rating here, but give me a chance to make my case!

That being said, there are a few things you should know before buying this book: 1., It is almost strictly a melt and pour soap book, with a brief explanation on how to rebatch but no recipes for such and 2., It is about the fun, creative side of soapmaking, with emphasis on the visual and olfactory effects you can create rather than making "skin care" products per se. Of course these soaps are all perfectly functional, gentle and satisfying as soap, but you may find they make even better gifts and conversation pieces.

I have made a few so far that caught my eye; indeed, with 300 to choose from, I could not possibly do justice to them all, and I apologize that I can only comment on a small fraction from personal experience. They are all lovely.

First I did the Rubber Ducky embedded on a clear, blue oval base as a finishing flourish on top of a baby shower gift (scented, of course, with fragrance of Baby Powder). Next, I couldn't resist the Honey soaps, which have bee themes of course and include honey and other skin-beneficial additives like bee pollen or oatmeal. A few of these are colored and molded to look like bees made out of honey. There is a Rainbow Loaf, which uses cubes of jewel-colored scraps arranged mosaically in a standard rectangular mold -- a perfect way to finish up on those leftovers. Finally, I tried the Gem soaps, which do a remarkable job of imitating several precious and semi-precious gem stones (my favorite is Amber, with a small plastic ant embedded in it. Clever!). I should remark here that many of the special effects achieved are possible only by using glycerine and other transparent melt-and-pour soap bases, a fact which "soap snobs" should consider.

Mainly because they are beautiful and clever, these soaps have qualities which recommmend them for gift giving. There is not a person on your holiday list which could not use a bar of soap (I hope), and somewhere in here is a soap for every man, woman and child, with fragrances and additives that could be custom-tailored. As I've stated before, this is not about skin care products per se, but the author does include recipes that help there (about a third of the total, or 100) and a reference list of soap bases that have specific beneficial properties and can sub in many of the more decorative recipes.

Most melt and pour books on the shelves have a hastily-done, almost cheesy look and seem to belong with those 10-page booklets you find on the racks at craft stores. Not so for this one. If melt-and-pour soapmaking's strength is it's creativeness and beauty, then the craft deserves a quality publication like 300 Handcrafted Soaps to represent it.

My one, tiny little criticism, for which I may have deducted half a star if Amazon would let me, would be the lack of a source list or references to obtain some of the fabulous molds Browning used, or the fascinating fragrances she recommmends for her recipes which don't seem to be easily obtainable in local retail stores. But, there's always the Internet.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely amazing!, April 8, 2003
By 
Margaret Jackson (Montreal, Quebec, CANADA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a positively fantastic book and a must-have for anyone who is interested in M & P soapmaking, whether it be on a professional or recreational level. The recipes are easy to follow (although I don't necessarily stick to the "per drop" recommendation for either coloring or scent) and the photographs are just beautiful. Guaranteed to get your creative juices flowing! Well worth every penny, you won't be disappointed!
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