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Re-inventing Old Fashioned Hair Pomade

May 14th, 2010 Posted in Inventions, New Products | no comment »
Re-inventing Hair Pomade

Re-inventing Hair Pomade

Well, I am putting the ‘natural Vaseline’ idea on hold.  I think I need to play around with something else first.  Pomade.  At least that’s what we used to call it, back in the 60s.  And only people of color and the white guys we called ‘greasers’ used it.  It is now a new millennium and we all use it.  But we now call it ’sculpting cream’ or lotion or whatever.  At any rate, they have so much garbage in it these days, I thought it was time to take it back, way back, to pre-1970.

My first goal is to just get an idea of how much wax to put in it.  So I’m only using almond oil and beeswax.  I heated it to melt the beeswax. It sure cools down fast.  I was surprised.  But then, so does lip balm and this is really just a big ol’ lip balm for the head, huh?

I really need to get a good prototype done today.  I’m out of hair goo.  I put a little orange liquid colorant in it to gussy it up.  It is a very pretty peach color.  Why the liquid colorant mixed right in with wax+oils, I have no idea.  It shouldn’t have.  But it did.  I’m a happy mixer.

Stay tuned.

Once I get this right, I think I can move on to the natural Vaseline idea.  That is a similar product, just not as stiff and sticky.

UPDATE: not enough wax in the formula.  I put a couple drops to the side, let them get cold.  Then tried to spike my hair.  It didn’t spike, just sort of made it oily.  I may have fixed the fake Vaseline….. LOL

UPDATE:  I think I am really close. :D  I put some on and when I went outside and saw myself in the rear view mirror, it was WOW.  My hair was so incredibly shiny where I put this stuff.  Cool.

You know when you make a sauce and you taste it and it is just ever so slightly wrong?  Like it would be so much better if you added that one thing.  What’s the thing, you ask, what does it need?  In this case, I’m thinking candelilla wax.  I’ll swap out some of the beeswax with candelilla wax and then I think its going to be perfect.

UPDATE:  Bingo! I do believe I’ve got it.  :D  I will use it this weekend and see if I find any problems, but so far, it is  pretty cool!  And I like how if you put scent in it, you’re like a little puff of perfume where ever you go.

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A Natural Petroleum Jelly

May 6th, 2010 Posted in Inventions, New Products | no comment »
Creating a new version of Nature's Jelly

Creating a new version of Nature's Jelly

We do currently sell this product as “Nature’s Jelly” on SoapCrafters.com.  However, we do not make it ourselves.  We have been purchasing it from a manufacturer who is pretty far away.  It never occurred to me to make it ourselves until the other day.

Today I’m playing around with a recipe to see if I can improve upon it.  Not that the product needs improving, but I just can’t help myself.  I must tinker!

I’m using only bee’s wax, soy oil, and palm oil.  I have it all melted and blended and I’m emulsifying it now and then as it cools.  It is still too warm to have anything interesting to report.

My hope is that it will be just like Vaseline Petroleum Jelly when I’m done, but made only with oils and bee’s wax, instead of whatever the heck is in petroleum jelly.  The name alone suggests some byproduct of fuel, haha.

I shall report back.

UPDATE:  It is a few hours into the cooling and I’m not so sure this is going to work with the recipe I came up with.  Seems to runny to me.  I might have to use a tougher wax to get the job done.  I dunno…  still waiting until its cold.

UPDATE:  Well, eh hem.  If you use palm oil to make this stuff it will be solid white.  Really, it should be translucent, you know?  It was almost thick enough after sitting for the weekend, but I scrapped it.  I need to use a liquid oil that is see through.

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WIN $99 in Soap Making Supplies!

May 5th, 2010 Posted in General, Helping with Skin Conditions | no comment »
Anyone can win $99 in soap making supplies

Anyone can win $99 in soap making supplies

Contest! Juicy Prize!
Win $99 in Soap Crafters products!
No purchase necessary to enter!

For the month of May we will be having an Essay Contest!
Please submit a story touching on the following subjects:
1. What types of homemade skin care products you make
2. How has this hobby/business changed your life
3. Include a photo of your products and/or yourself.
4. Why did you start making homemade skin-care products?

Your story submission has to be entered by May 31, 2010.
Winner will be selected by June 7th, if not before.
The winner will win a gift certificate of $99 in
Fabulous SoapCrafters.com products and their story and photos
will be posted on the website.

How to Submit your story: Please email your story with photos to: pamelalove@soapcrafters.com
Feel free to forward this link to your soaper friends, because this contest is open to all people. You do not have to be a customer of SoapCrafters.com to enter.

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How do I get started selling?

Apr 30th, 2010 Posted in General, Selling your Stuff | no comment »
Selling your handmade soaps and skin care products

Selling your handmade soaps and skin care products

I am asked that question a lot. I suppose there are better people to ask, given that I sell supplies and not finished soap and skin care products at SoapCrafters.com. However, that being said, I deal with people who sell their homemade soaps and skin care products all the the time, so I do know a little about it.

This morning a new soap maker emailed me and asked that question. She has been making soaps for Christmas presents and now she wants to do it ‘for real’ and get her freshly manicured toes into business for herself. So, I shared with her what our customers at SoapCrafters.com have shared with me.

I think the first thing you really need to do is to connect with others who make soaps and lotions at home and have already started selling their homemade goods.  The Internet is the best way to hook up with these soapers.

If you are on Facebook, we have started a new Facebook page:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Soapcrafters/117333044956790
and a group for soapers:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Soapcrafters/117333044956790#!/group.php?gid=102818496429626&ref=ts
once those get going, there will be discussions about this.

For right now, we have an email chat list where hundreds of soapers are subscribed, just ask a question on there on how to get started:
http://www.soapcrafters.com/soap_maker_mailing_list

Soon, we will have a huge forum running on meltandpour.com, but it isn’t ready yet.

Most people start selling just by accident.  They start making gifts, as the girl who emailed me this morning did, and their friends and family start begging for more.  They also tell their friends and then they want to buy too.  Most people in a home soap business didn’t intend to go into business, the demand for their homemade soaps and lotions pretty much just put them into business.

Most towns have a Farmer’s Market these days or at least a Flea Market, so go get yourself a booth there and start giving out little samples and start selling there.  You can build up a great customer base by having booths in those places.  Make sure you show up every weekend, so people can depend on you being there.  If you have a website, make sure you hand out small business cards with your website address on them.  Put hanging tags on your items so there is a better chance of people saving the information.  If it is on a label on a bar of soap, it will naturally get thrown away when they open the soap up to use.  Make sure your phone number and website address is on all your labels of your products!  If your happy customer can’t make it to the Farmer’s Market when they need more, they will give you a call or visit your website to buy next time.

Listen to your customers!  If you keep hearing the same thing over and over again from them about what they want, then you start making it for them.  Be careful not to get into the big ego of what you want your business to be.  It is your customers who are going to determine that, not you.  If your customers keep telling you that they want a rose scented lotion, then you are going to make that if you want to be successful.

When I started SoapCrafters.com all those years ago, I laugh now at what I thought the company was going to be.  I thought it was going to be only natural herbs, essential oils, and some vegetable oils.  If you look at it now, you can see that those items are just a small part of what we sell.  Our customers demanded melt and pour soap, fragrances, colorants, containers and premade bases.  So, I gave them what they wanted to buy, and we went on to win a couple of awards in Utah for being in the top 100 fastest growing corporations.  In 2003, we were the thirteenth fastest growing company!  Give them what they want and they will make you a successful business person.  I am continually developing new products like our Soap Noodles shredded soaps to make soap easy to make, our Super Concentrate shampoo bases that is the foundation for many successful business’s products, and lately our line of pure and natural body creams and lotions.

Other ways you can start your company is by asking hotels, bed & breakfasts, gift shops, and small stores to buy your product for resale.  Make sure you can create your products inexpensive enough for them to add a 50% mark-up to it. Sometimes you will have to put your products in the store on consignment, which means you will get paid when they sell it.  Consignment can work out nicely, but other times it is sort of a nightmare of paperwork and keeping track of stock and damaged or stolen goods.

If you sell dog shampoo, then go to dog shows, grooming salons, or even volunteer at the local humane society.  Try to get them to carry your products.  If you sell soap, shampoo and conditioner, then approach the local beauticians and tell them you’ll design products just for their shop with their name on it!

One important thing to always keep in mind, is you have to make your products inexpensively so that you can make money after all this work.  Buy the largest sizes of your ingredients that you can.  Make things by scratch if you can. If you are buying mail order, place large orders instead of a lot of little orders in order to save on shipping costs.  Make your own labels and business cards on your home computer instead of using a printing service.

Packaging is what sells products!  Really doll up your goods and it will totally pay off!  People buy by the look of an item if they are unfamiliar with it.  Shoppers like bright colors and heavenly scents.  So, get your artistic creativity juices flowing.  You are going to need to be an artist!

Pricing is the weirdest thing on earth, seriously.  People will buy something all day long for $19.95 and they will pass over the exact same product priced at $11.95.  You would be wise to develop your products with prices like $9.95 and $19.95.  People were brainwashed by advertising many, many years ago that the value was $19.95 or $9.95 and now the 99th monkey has kicked in and this is how you’re going to sell a lot of stuff.  Sure, $19.95 is only five cents away from $20, but trust me, use $19.95, if you want big sales.  Use $20 if you want to sit all day and sell hardly anything.  If you’re selling wholesale to stores, this pricing isn’t going to necessarily work for the stores.  This is retail, on the shelf pricing I’m talking about.  So have your suggested retail prices at $19.95 and smaller stuff at $9.95, and deal with the store’s pricing the best you can and still end with a .95 on the end.

I could go on and on, but I’d like you soapers who sell your goods to add some ideas on how you do it! Please use the comment button to share your experience with those who are just starting out.

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Hair Conditioner Experiments

Apr 23rd, 2010 Posted in Recipes | no comment »
Fun with Hair Conditioner

Fun with Hair Conditioner

Today’s project is: messing around with hair conditioner.

We sell hair conditioner that is in flake form and you mix it with hot water and it turns in to a wonderful hair conditioner. People keep asking me if you can add oil to it.  I am guessing that you can but the issue is, will the oil separate right back out?  Today I made some to find out.

The recipe I used is this:

1/2 ounces (weighed) of Soap Crafters Conditioner Flakes
10 ounces of water
5 ounces of Soap Crafters Aloe Liquid
1-1/2 teaspoons Soap Crafters Fragrance Oil
2 teaspoons Sweet Almond Oil

Put Sweet Almond Oil and conditioner flakes in to 160F degree water. Mix with a stick blender until smooth. Add the Aloe Liquid once the conditioner mixture is below 130 degrees. Add scent and color (if desired) to the conditioner. Mix well.

The end product is smooth and looks like it worked just fine.  I’ll let it sit around for the weekend and see if it stays emulsified.  So far so good!  I’ll report back.

UPDATE:  It held together great!  And it is REALLY nice on the hair. :)  Success!

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