Please read through these Soap Making Safety Tips before you start measuring out your ingredients, it might be boring but believe me it is for your own good!
Soap making can be a safe and rewarding hobby, but it can also be a very dangerous past-time if you do not respect the ingredients and the process.
So what are the risks?
Burns, inhalation of toxic fumes, skin irritations, kitchen fires, blindness. Is that enough in the way of risks for you?
Regardless of which soap making method you choose, you will have to use a heat source at some stage to make your soap so normal saftey rules in the kitchen apply. As you would if you were baking a cake:
Unless you are happy to stick with melt and pour methods, making soap necessarily involves the use of caustic soda. Contact with dry caustic soda on your skin can cause skin irritations, and when you mix casutic soda with water, the mixture gets very hot, and I mean really hot!
Apart from the potential for serious burns if you splash the caustic soda on your skin or in your eyes, the fumes rising from the mixture can cause disorientation and dizziness.
You need to treat this chemical with respect.
But working with caustic soda does not have to end in tears, if you take a few precautions use the appropriate safety equipment, and exercise a bit of common sense. Below you will find my top tips for working with caustic soda safely.
Follow these soap making safety tips and your soap making experience will be a safe one!
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