homemade soap gifts ideas
Making homemade soap as gifts can be pretty easy and a lot of fun. Homemade soap bars are great gift ideas because you can also whip up pretty large and attractive batches of them in a day or two and satisfy your entire holiday gift list. I made these as gifts for the holidays a few years back and some of the recipients were sincerely unsure whether I had bought these at a boutique or if I had actually made them.

The process to making these gifts is quite simple. Basically melt the soap base for a few minutes in the microwave, add the natural scents and exfoliants, pour them into molds and let them cool. That’s it! Creating unique names and gift labels can add to the creativity and presentation of these gift to make them even more memorable. Soapmaking purists probably use a more difficult process that requires the use of lye and therefore there is a safety issue, but I found that the melt and pour soap variety as gifts are just as elegant, much easier and safer, and creativity can be involved in every step of the process.

Here is a video tutorial on how to make homemade melt and pour soap from the people at brambleberry.com:

Soap Base…

First of all I have found that Brambleberry.com can be pretty much your one-stop shop for all the supplies. This article is going to seem like an ad for them, but I have had a lot of success with their site and products. They specialize in everything that is soapmaking, from soap base and molds, to exfoliant and essential oil ingredients to even boxes and labels. You can get an olive oil soap base (as well as some of the ingredients) at Michael’s or other craft store if you can’t wait for the shipping, but Brambleberry.com has so many interesting and quality choices of soap bases that it would be a shame not to use them. I have used their Aloe Vera base, their creamy and dreamy goats milk base, shea butter, organic clear, a honey base and they even have shaving base, that would make a homemade gift idea that is more accessible for guys.

Ingredients….homemade soap ingredients

As soon as your base is melted, you can add your ingredients. Now there are far too many options to mention here but I will mention a few. As far has scents, Brambleberry carries an enormous variety of essential oils and other types of scents. Again, you can get a few of these at Michael’s, or better yet your local health food store, Whole Foods or grocery co-op. They tend to be a bit pricey depending on the scent, that is why Brambleberry carries cheaper options like extracts and fragrance oils. Essential oils, though expensive, have a stronger, purer scent than any of the other types of scents so if you are making large batches I would recommend  getting a few. The ones I’d recommend as essential oils are a nice soothing lavender, a citrus oil like bergamot which is a great uplifting “wake-up” scent, and maybe a rosemary, eucalyptus, or peppermint. You can also get a sampler kit from Brambleberry. They also carry a wide variety of exfoliants. My personal favorites are their shredded loofah and pumice. You can also be creative and use oatmeal, which a lot of people combine with honey, bamboo extract, which is a light exfoliant, and walnut seeds or even cornstarch. You can also look in your kitchen for ingredients like cinnamon and coffee grounds. You can find soap recipes to start out with at teachsoap.com. They also have a detailed tutorial on melt and pour soap making. You can use dyes and colorants, but I have found that once you add the other ingredients, the bars take on an already attractive, and  natural looking character.

A few tips on scenting… The scents listed here are pretty universally enjoyed by men and women alike. I would keep the scents on the subtle side, and stay away from the more floral scents unless of course you know that the person receiving the gift will enjoy it. Also when your experimenting with scent combinations you smelling sense will often soon become overloaded, making it difficult to sample each smell. A tip that a local soapmaker once told me is to keep coffee grounds nearby, and smell them to sort of cleanse your olfactory palate between batches. Coffee grounds, by the way, are a great ingredient to include in a kitchen soap as it tends to remove or at least disguise strong smells. This is great for when you have chopped a lot of onions.

Molds….

Brambleberry carries carries a wide variety of soap molds. You might also find molds at your local craft store or Michael’s. I personally use just a standard rectangular soap mold I got from Michael’s. Again, I think that the soap ingredients make the bars attractive enough, and any unusual shapes might just make them look chaotic and busy.

Presentation…homemade soap gifts

Yes, Brambleberry also carries gift boxes for homemade soap. If you use these sliding gift boxes, make sure your soap molds are rectangular and small enough to fit. They also carry these natural-looking gift bags for homemade soap. These gift boxes are excellent for applying your own personalized gift labels that you can make from Avery’s full sheet labels that you can get from any office supply store. It was fun for me to come up with an overall design and unique names like “lavender dreamtime” or “sunny citrus”.  If you don’t want to do all that, wrap them in some raffia ribbon from your local craft shop, and tie a little gift label to it.

I had fun making these as homemade gifts. Everyone I gave these to were very impressed.

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