How To Make Soap with Rajiv Surendra
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
- Rajiv has been making his own bars of soap for almost nine years and it's the only soap he uses because it's great stuff! This video has been the most requested by viewers, so we're thrilled to finally share this one.
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★ TABLE OF CONTENTS ★
• 1:20 Goats milk soap
• 3:30 Soap making process is magical
• 5:05 Making soap is dangerous
• 6:30 Return of the apron to get down to business
• 7:05 History of cleaning skin
• 10:10 How to make the soap recipe
•12:14 The coconut oil appearance
•13:00 Combination of different fats determine the hardness of the soap
•14:00 Check the temperature to determine the lye solution
•15:43 Stainless steel spoon to add the lye to the liquid
•16:30 No clumps of lye
•17:38 Stick blender immersed in the liquid
•20:57 Soap ready for the mold
•21:40 You need 24 hours for it to harden in the freezer
•22:00 Do not touch this soap for a while- As long as 6 months!
•24:00 Wooden block made for the soap mold
•26:30 Cutting the soap with wire
•27:31 Stand them upright, so they have air circulating around them as they cure
•29:19 End result of soap with time
💡 TOPICS IN THIS VIDEO 💡
• My own goats milk soap
• Wise man soap making
• Finicky chemical process
• The weights and temperature are important and exacting
• Adaptation of goat's milk recipe
•Lye is an important ingredient but very dangerous and hazardous
•Lye crystals
•Vegetable shortening or lard/pig fat as an option
•Olive oil and coconut oil in the soap making process
•Using a scale is important in getting precise measurements in the soap making process
•The different fats saponify with the lard
•Lye heats up when mixed with liquid
•Do not use wooden spoon with lye
•Stick blender used but be careful not to splatter anything
•Goggles very important for protective gear
•soap mold used to cut into bars
•Saponification is the chemical process in which triglycerides are combined with a strong base to form fatty acid metal salts during the soap-making process
•The chemical process heats up so important to put in the freezer for 24 hours
•Soap has to sit for 2-3 weeks before it is safe enough to use
•Creamy and opaque but the soap will become translucent over time
•Soap can come out looking like cheese
•Protective gear important to protect your eyes and your skin
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🔴 ** ABOUT THIS CHANNEL **
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🔎 HASHTAGS
#soapmaking
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I would watch this man file his taxes lol
Lmao I hope so
Or pluck chickens😊👋🏼
I'd watch him file his nails!
Honestly, he would teach us all it so well I'd feel much more confident to try it
OMG! I sure would too…every minute of it 🤣
Hi Rajiv!
I love your content! I am a soap maker, and I wanted to add that it is very important to always add your lye to your liquid and never add liquids to lye. If you add liquid to lye, you can get a volcano reaction that can result in injuries.
Your soap is beautiful❤
Hi ! Can you explain why the mask? Are there gases that escape? Does that mask have to be a certain type?
@@sophieoshaughnessy9469 I grew up with a master soap maker as well as having taken some intensive chemistry classes in college and I can respond. The chemical reaction involved with adding lye to water is massively exothermic. Your essentially forcing the balance of H2O, HO- and H3O+ that normal water has to dramatically shift (this is what pH measures, the balance of HO- and H3O+ in water) by reacting NaOH (lye) with the water to dramatically increase the amount of H3O+ (though most just refer to it as H+ because talking about the spare protons is easier to understand on a base level)).
This produces an IMMENSE amount of heat (if your base ingredients aren't chilled, it can bring the water to a boil! It's that violent of a reaction). At the temps this reaction causes, water will naturally let off a lot of steam (think like how hot tea does) and that steam carries the highly caustic concentration of unreacted protons that will chemically react with places that have water (you eyes, nose, mouth, lungs) and cause chemical burns. This is why Rajiv was keen to point out his hesitation in showing this. A full face respirator (p100 recommended) is sufficient for NaOH lye. This stuff will also start to eat at the top layer of your skin if it comes into direct contact with skin hence the gloves and apron.
I've spent my life working with and being safe around these kinds of chemicals so I feel safe to do so myself, but if you aren't, I'd recommend starting with making non-lye soap or something that has already been saponified (i.e., the dangerous part already done). Another thing I wish he had gone into is not just safety-ware but making a set up for IF something goes wrong (reference an SDS or Safety Data Sheet for this, they're easily googled). If you wanna plunge into this kind of stuff, reach out to a local soap maker in your area and ask if they could teach you. My mother showed me and because I knew that she knew what she was doing and that I knew what to do it things go awry, it felt safe and not dangerous at all because I was informed.
A Tamil man, who sings Scottish laments, and drops occasionally into Dick Van Dyke cockney English. You're are a magical mystery of a man.
Thank you sooooo much
Magical mystery Man & a true renaissance man! Loved your song!!!
Truly as a human
The last time I made soap was with my grandmother, 67 years ago in NC. She was making lye soap to use on Granddaddy's work clothes. Grandma started by making lye from oak wood ashes. Our fat was pork lard we rendered during hog killing. If she added other ingredients, I don't remember them. We worked outside over an open fire. I helped stir. She poured the soap batch in a round pan, and when it was hardened, cut it in pie shaped wedges. I've always wanted to make soap again. Grandma's soap would remove the tobacco gum from our clothes, not much else would. Thank you for all you do to inform, entertain, and keep us company.
Wow, fascinating! I wish I could have been there myself! Thanks for sharing.
I really love this comment. It's unintentionally filled with so much history and culture. I hope you're having a lovely day!
Similar story. I grew up in Nebraska on a farm once, or twice a year my German grandmother, and aunt would come to the farm and make soap. It was completely rustic outdoors in a huge black cauldron. Iron? It was about 3 feet across with a curled lip like a claw foot bathtub bathtub. Lye was made from ashes, rendered fat from beef, tallow or pig fat. A fire was started around and underneath the cauldron. They would add ingredients in including old, small bars of soap that were not comfortable to use. It was an all day project. We were instructed to stay away, as I was probably pretty young. I remember we used to play in the cauldron when it wasn’t in use. my sister and I could sit in it. I was probably less than eight years old and she was three years younger than I was. Such a good memory. 🦊
@rajivsurendra when I grew up, I lived in the mountains and made soap two times once with rendered beef fat from the local butcher, and vegetable oils. & shea butter, coconut oil, We added essential oils that were amazing and then a second time making it all vegetable . we collected plastic inner packaging from store bought cookies and crackers. Cookie packages had designs
On the bottom, sometimes large rectangles other times individual little circles or squares where the cookies from the store would sit inside the package. They worked as great molds and left pretty patterns on the soap. It was beautiful and made great gifts. I remember it was pure white. Oddly enough, I don’t remember using lye but we must have?
I have seen silicone bolts for making soap or salves
I love Jasmine or Camellia or Gardenia or Freesia floral scents.
Rose is nice but everywhere.
And I am allergic to lavender but hate the scent regardless....
Every friend who has been gifted a bar of your soap who watches this should realize what a lovely present it was. They got a gift made with love.
and crystals of danger hehe
This is the channel I watch when I want to feel inner peace.
Rajiv is so soothing in everything he does. He effortlessly creates an atmosphere of comfort and charm.
I have a new appreciation for those who sell homemade soap at the farmers market. Always thought they seemed pricey. Now it’s clear why they charge what they do. Thank you for the lesson.
Yes!
This guy is the Bob Ross of RUclips "my most treasures gifts are tools" "I have great friends"
Bros out here living the life!
One human with so much elegance and perfection all around! Gotta love this guy!!! His personality is soooo endearing too!!! Thank you, Rajiv!!
This new season of Breaking Bath is off to a great start!
😂 love it!
Hi Rajiv, I am 74 but remember my grandmother living on a farm making soap with homemade lye. She had a big can nailed to the side of her house by the back door. She had it filled with ash and had a container nailed below that. We kids were well aware to stay away from that container, in which the lye would collect. She also had one of those giant cast iron cauldrons like in the drawing you showed. She would build a fire under it, and using collected fat and her homemade lye would make all her own soap. I remember the soap was not pretty, but it certainly worked. She was a busy farm wife, so the soap was just put in a box under the sink after it was cut. She was a treasure! She also made quilts, mattresses, clothes..if it could be made at home she did so. Love your videos, this one especially.
Wow, mattresses? Cool. Love hearing old stories of our beloved relatives.
An absolutely lovely and informative video but Rajiv’s warnings are to be taken seriously. Years ago when we raised goats, I made soap in my kitchen and the immersion blender splattered the fat-lye mixture all over my painted cabinets and window mouldings. It removed several layers of paint right down to the wood. Thank you for fresh inspiration and a reminder of caution, Rajiv.
Oh boy, thanks for sharing that! I want people to know how dangerous this is.
Yes, thank you both for pointing out the dangers of lye. I had an ancestor who blinded himself in a soapmaking accident; hearing this story as a child was when I first learned what lye is, and it left an indelible impression! So grateful for access to good protective equipment in the modern era, as well as being able to choose whether or not we make our own soap!
My blood pressure drops just relaxing and watching this new age Mister Roger! I always learn something interesting watching.
Or in our case in Canada…..Mr. Dressup….so calm!
You nailed it.
Rajiv is a true Renaissance man !
I was thinking new age Bob Ross, but you’re right! Definitely giving Mr. Roger vibes!
Hello, I think you did a pretty good job explaining soap making. I’ve been making soap since 2015. Why did I wait so long! Been wanting to make it since I was 14. I use an old stainless 3 quart pan with a handle and some plastic pitchers. These items are used only for soaping. I use about 8 percent coconut oil. You can use an online lye calculator to figure your recipe. I cure the soap for six weeks. Homemade soap is so awesome to use for everything!! I use it in shower on hair and body, carpet cleaning, dishes, etc.
Wow! Didn't know it took so long to cure! I can really appreciate why handmade soap can be a little expensive, but worth it!
That's why I don't sell it, it's just not worth any price that someone would be willing to pay...considering it takes up space in my apartment for 6 months, curing.
@@rajivsurendra I bet your apartment smells like a dream.
@@rajivsurendrayou underestimate what your fan base would be willing to pay for an original piece of anything you've touched.
Absolutely!!!@@amilawstudent
Hi Rajiv. Thank you very, very much for having taken the time to show us your wonderful soap making recipe. The combination of ingredients does make a big difference in it's consistency. The mother of one of my ex-boyfriends, used to make the soap the very old fashion way. The didn't have much money at all so absolutely everything was reused, including the fat from the meals they had cooked to make soap. She made all the clothes for all the family and she reused the ugly plastic bags from the supermarket to crochet handbags. Things that now seem to come back as fashion trends, but 30-40 and more years ago, she already used to do all of this and more as something natural. Nothing was wasted but they lacked nothing either, despite the little they had. So thank you for helping people with your RUclips channel to rediscover and appreciate these things.
Wow, fascinating to read this. I love these recollections, thank you for sharing.
My folks are Indian, born & raised in east Africa before immigrating to Canada in the early 70s. My dad recently mentioned that his grandmother used to wash dishes with ash, so I was fascinated to hear lye is made from it 😊 I'm heeding all your cautions and will be supporting local soap makers from now on! Thank you for sharing this beautiful part of your life and knowledge with us❤🙏👍🏼
I am a retired teacher and lifelong learner who is just captivated by your talents, your method of presentation, and the passion you share about life.
There is something very “incongruous” about hearing that song coming from someone wearing a baseball cap backwards! Hahaha
Agreed but it sure made me remember my dear sweet mother so fondly.
He said he was gangster! 😂
I used to watch my Mamaw Wilson make a pan of lye soap, as she called it. She wouldn’t let us in the kitchen, now I know why! She poured it into an old pan, let it get hard, then cut it into squares. One block stayed at the kitchen sink, one at her washing machine, and one by the bathroom sink for extra dirty hands. Nowadays soaps are everywhere but Mamaw made it because it was something she learned from her mother for necessities sake. She passed at ninety-eight, and I never asked her to teach me that special craft. So happy to see younger folks keeping this art alive! 🧼🫶🏻🙌🏻
Precious memory❤
The heat given off as the lye mixes with the milk means that an exothermic reaction is occurring. The lye is dissolving in the water in the milk and because lye (or sodium hydroxide NaOH) is so polar (strong + charge on Na and - charge on OH) the dissolution process releases a lot of energy. You are right to take precautions and to be very careful to not get it on your skin or in your eyes/mouth. The solution formed is strongly alkaline, which is the opposite end of the pH scale to acid, but it can do just as much damage.
I would be overjoyed to receive homemade soap. How lovely. There is no end to your talent or thoughtfulness.
God has gifted you with great teaching skills. Thank you for all your content!
Allahu Akbar.
This made me so happy. Firstly, the singing! What an absolutely beautiful intro. And secondly, I’ve been wondering and held off on making my own soap. So happy to consider this process. ✨
Years ago, my sisters and I used to make our own soaps, and we made one very similar to your Wiseman soap -- we scented ours with frankinsence and myrrh, too,, but we also added gold flakes, and gave it away as gifts at Christmas. It was a lovely soap.
Also, white vinegar neutralizes lye -- if you happen to get some lye on your skin, splash it with vinegar.
I recall when I was a kid in Vancouver 60 years ago the Scouts used to do fat drives to collect fats saved in the households. It was used for soaps and other oil products. I've been looking at soap making lately. I do sew, knit, spin, etc., as ways to learn. Always enjoy your videos.
I would suggest you strain your lye solution through a fine sieve to keep any lye crystals out of your soap so one less thing to worry about.
When I visited Turkey several years ago I fell in love with aleppo soap. It has become the standard in our home and this video makes me appreciate it even more.
Lovely video, Rajiv. It brings back so many memories with my abuela. My granny used to make soap every summer in her patio in southern Spain with used olive oil she collected from fried foods the whole year. She would make a huge batch for the family and then would let it rest on the floor in her house. The soap chunks were not as refined as yours, they were big bricks shaped unevenly. I still remember the smell and how good it was. We even used it for washing clothes. I always wanted to learn from her but unfortunately couldn't. I hope one day I can make my own soap too. Thank you for your work and your videos ❤
Safety tip: keep white kitchen vinegar nearby. For anyone whose skin is burning from the lye, take some paper towel and vinegar to wash off your skin.
Reasoning: lye is activated by water. This is ❌ bad. But vinegar will neutralize it.
Very good advice!
@@tamb7587Happy to help 🙏🏻
Your videos are like a lovely letter from a friend. Thanks for the Annie Laurie song, just beautiful.
I think our Rajiv is in love, he seems particularly happy and singing which I love to hear ❤❤❤
Can you imagine how amazing someone would have to be to be a match for Rajiv? Can there be two such on Earth at one time?
My grandmother used to make soap in the back yard, and my mom stepped in it. She experienced a serious burn, and had to wear a special boot for months. You’re such a master at teaching these crafts that are almost lost. Thank you for your lessons, and thank you for your beautiful voice. What a delight!❤
He is such I gentle wholesome soul !!!!! I think everyone loves him !!!!
I loved to hear him say , “I have good friends” how nice . I bet he himself is a good friend , that’s how you get good friends. By being one . He’s so interesting and multi talented .
Oh my gosh! I have played Annie Laurie as a fiddle tune for most of my life, and never knew it had words! 😍 Who would have guessed I would find out from a video of Rajiv making soap?
The plant in this room looks 100% better than the topiary in the living-room. Lol, I Love the music selection for the presentation of cutting the soap. You are such an inspiration.
and now we want to see your bathroom tour🙏 it would be interesting to see what you use and organise your bathroom supplies
We'll get in there eventually. Probably with @brooklinen
Beautiful video, Rajiv. As you were so gracefully making your soap, I kept thinking about the many generations of women who made soap, doing so without electric mixers or refrigerators or stoves, and my heart swelled with respect for all the women of the past, with admiration of their know-how, and with gratitude for all that they did.
I have been a soapmaker for 8 years, and you still manage to teach me new things! Love your videos, keep making the world a better place ❤
OMIGOD YOU DID IT! Thank you so much Rajiv! Such an informative video, and you were generous enough to show us how to make your Wiseman soap. ❤
I’ve been watching soap making videos for a decade I just never expected one to come from this channel lol
I think one of my favorite things about this channel and Rajiv is the anachronism all over lol It's a beautiful old song, in a beautiful full of old things apartment... and then he shows up with a backwards cap lol makes me really feel like I can do what he's doing too
The video we've all been waiting for🤭 Thank you Rajiv for everything you put out there! Happy Saturday
Hi Rajiv, I hope you don’t take this the wrong way. But you remind me of “ Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood “. I loved the way he spoke in such a kind and comforting tone. 🥰 And everything he did and said had a lesson to be learned.🥰
I JUST ❤ YOUR CONTENT! I feel so much nostalgia and longing for life in the countryside of my hometown on the island 🏝️ 🇯🇲.
Girl if mi love him one more time! He's wholesome.
Girl if mi love him one more time! He's so wholesome.
@@elle_9136 AYE!!🤣 right!! Love when he sings the old church songs… he’s a special human.I just love everything he does!! Now me need fi find a goat milk soap with frankincense & myrrh. My grandma always use that natural stuff . I can smell it now…ugh 😀🌹
Loved the singing. So…grew up in Brownsville, Texas, 93 percent Hispanic. Educated by the Sisters of the Incarnate Word most of who came straight from Ireland. Music class was learning Irish songs. So all of us little Hispanic girls learned many Irish songs…Annie Laurie, Danny Boy, Irish Lullaby, When Irish Eyes are Laughing, My Wild Irish Rose, Molly Malone, and many others. Annie Laurie is my favorite, thank you for bringing back happy school memories.
I made soap years ago in a craft class, but it was a recipe without lye, must look it up. I remember we used Lavender for the scent.
That's so nice! Annie Laurie is Scottish.
Wow, I didn’t know that, always thought it was Irish. It’s a beautiful song.
Very cool, now I really appreciate handmade soap; I work in a local antique shop and one of the dealers makes soaps that smell amazing, they are pricey but I now know the value of them..a true art form..thank you for sharing!
What a sweet little beginning of a video! Simple camera shot, no one in it, but we hear the singing of our favorite person and some slight clattering around indicating his industriousness and preparation. 💕💜💓
My dad used to sing that song. He used to sing it, and so he named my baby sister Laurie Ann. He died a few years ago, so - it was so nice to hear it again, thank you!
I sing Annie Laurie all the time. Makes me happy to read these comments from people that know the tune, and have a connection to it. Thank you for watching.
As a 21 yr soaper i recognize that total relief and elation feeling when you get a good batch". In fact im pretty sure that music is the same exact music i hear in my head when i get a "good batch".
Excellent Information! It was impossible to see trace when i was learning. This is the first time ive heard it explained so well. Also ... your muscles look so very nice bulging out of your sleeves.
Thank you!
Rajiv, you are the Universal Man! My happiness is always bolstered by your intimate and oh-so-learning-worthy visits! And, I mean, your worldwide dialects!! 🙌
We had a beautiful adopted Grandma who asked us to call her Granny, as she was Southern.I was about 9, so about 52 years ago. She made us a batch of lye soap as gifts, and I remember using it, and my skin just burned and burned. I have super sensitive skin anyway, but I think it may not have cured long enough. We still loved her, just was a bit more wary about her presents. :) Thank you for this special video!
That soap was lye heavy, most likely - meaning it contained more lye than necessary to saponify that amount of oils.
What a lovely way to spend some quiet time: listening to Rajiv (caution us ad nauseum about the perils of soap making🤣) while I knit. Thank you!
Awwww, he’s singing Annie Laurie…and beautifully! Would love to hear more singing🥹
It is best to freeze milks when using it as a water replacement in creating a lye solution as it can burn easily and does not smell good. Ventilation within a space when using lye is also important. Your bowls are lovely. Thank you for sharing.
Great informative video, my daughter made soap once and said that was enough because every one she gave it to hoarded instead of using it. Beautiful singing intro!!
Many people I've given this soap to have also saved it but I try to get them to actually use it!
Gangsta, yo! Thank you for sharing. The singing was beautiful.
Great video!!!! Is there anything you can't do? You re so talented.
0:20 when I grow up I want to be like Rajiv! I am 40years old.
Just FYI: grade 3 ON (only) curriculum still has settler history, but couched in non 'Doctrine of Discovery' terms. Still lots of fun for kids to learn what it takes to learn from the land to fashion shelter, food, everyday items to sustain a life in a natural environment from the resources you have on hand. Cheers for this trip through saponification, always a satisfying experience - and always appreciated the scent combo of frankincense & myrrh: yummy, heady and spicy. When my husband & I married in 1976 we made handmade soap as part of our bonbonnières wedding favours, I have several old soapmaking books, but I inévitable go back to Beverly Plummer's 'Fragrance' which described the process, albeit with 1975 resources. So satisfying to take simple ingredients to make luscious, lathering soap with custom scents. The bonus is the chemical reaction takes something caustic and produces emollient glycerine, so soothing on skin. As you say, Rajiv: magical!
Rajiv, your videos generate such lovely comments & replies!
It shows what a genuine, warm & generous person you are. It's no wonder joy shines out of your eyes, your life is filled with authenticity & the genuine desire to share the things that give you happiness.
May I say thank you & God bless you.
I am slowly working my way through this man's entire catalog of videos. So refreshing to see someone making cool shit and having a good time when the rest of the internet is turmoil.
Too cute…. There are so many people living inside you… 💚💚💚🤗
I've always wanted to make soap but it seems complicated, so I just make soy candles and buy savon de Marseille. Your friends are so lucky to get hand-poured goatmilk soap from you regularly!
Decades of womens hard work writing down formula calculations have made soapmaking very simple. Theres calculators online thatll tell you how much of everything to add
Ive been waiting my whole life for this video. I can't wait to finally smell this soap
Fascinating!!!!
The process while dangerous was actually not as complicated as my mind thought at all.
Thank you Rajiv!!!
Don't take it lightly though, I have done this for eight years and we've edited this video so it seems smooth and casual, but every time I make soap, I take my time and do it very slowly and carefully. Even the fumes from the lye solution are dangerous, so if you try this at home, be VERY cautious.
Thank you Rajiv!
Yes, I would have to dot all my i’s and cross all my t’s before I would attempt making soap. But you showing us that with proper care and tools a task is achievable.
Today I am hemming a pair of jeans keeping the original hem…. Less dangerous!!!
Somehow, the algorithm brought me to your channel today. I've been watching your cooking content, cleaning house. I'm ready to donate my never-used soap making supplies but this video tells me it's time to be brave and do it!
I remember many years ago (I’m 67) watching an episode of Martha Stewart with Guy Wolfe making pottery/ terra cotta pots and thinking just how genuine and kind he was then. You indeed have a great friend,Jajiv in he and his wife! In fact I have that episode on VHF that we taped off the TV 😊
Rajiv, your contents are so soothing, magical and beautiful, you make the world better! You're one of a kind. Thank you!
Thank you for watching.
Wow! What can he do? And he makes it look so intimidating. He is a genius, truly
Love your video! In Germany they use a soap called Gallseife which translates into Gall soap. It removes any stains from clothing and it is very economical. Every German knows about it. This is what I found on the net :"Gall soap is made by combining curd soap with ox gall, a secretion from a cow's liver. The soap's main active ingredients are bile acids, which break down fats and proteins in stains. " Not vegeterian friendly unfortunately...
This was great! I’m glad you reinforced the message that soap making is a dangerous activity. I’ve made soap several times with a friend and we used this method. And yes, we wore all of the protective gear and made sure that we remained calm and paid attention at each stage of the making. Lye can get freakin’ hot - fast! But we always got excellent results. The tip about putting the goat milk in the freezer first is excellent. Thanks! Love the brief soap history lesson too!
Hi Raj, there is something about you that makes me smile the second I see or hear you❣️I think part of the reason is you always present the best version of yourself, always. On or off camera. I can tell. Hugs to you . 👏💐❤️
Rajiv couldn’t contain himself. He thought himself so funny (he was!) speaking with different accents. First a couple of smiles repressed and then unfettered laughter. Very charming. 💕
That pitcher is awesome! Love your content and knowledge, thank you for sharing!
Thank you. I love that pitcher, it's about 180 years old.
Yes I was afraid as I watched that the lye was in the beautiful Rockingham(??) pitcher. (I should have known better)… but I wonder if the lye damages the yellow ware bowls? I’m sure you have to be very careful cleaning up your spatula and immersion blender! Thank you for this video and your concern that we be careful if we attempt this!
Thank you Rajiv for keeping our request. I will be trying this in my new apartment with some local Frankincense here in Bengal. Also the background score is so beautiful and nostalgic for this video. Much love xx
Yes, I was hoping you’d post a soap video! Thank you! My great grandmother made lye soap from ashes outdoors. I have her cauldron.
Indeed, we still need to learn that pioneer chapter; at least in Ontario. Hence our family’s love of soap making, candle making, and camp fire cooking. What a joy to see others fall in love with these forms of independence and self care. ❤
My great grandmother had to make soap and her memories of it were not happy 😂so it’s nice to see someone really enjoying this wonderful process.
Oh, what a treat Rajiv! How I love your channel.
You are really amazing. LOL. Take care and keep posting. I love to watch
Yes!! Love love love the singing!!! 🥰
I only realized lye burned people when I saw Fight Club 😅. Thanks for posting this! Sooo informative.
Wants to be Fully unique... proceeds to do so in every way.
I love your genuineness and your many talents. Your knowledge of the history of soap making really engaged me as did your demonstration. I knew nothing of this topic and now I do! Such an enriching experience, thank you!
I love your pitcher. Thank you for sharing the soap making with us. The song was beautiful.
SO glad you posted this! If you mentioned it, please forgive me, but be sure not to use soaping bowls and utensils for food preparation.
I made my first soap in the 80’s when I had to go to the butcher’s to buy fat to render into tallow. Once you make soap, you will never look at a bar the same. You can also look up soap calculators to find out how to use different oils and fats to change the properties of the soap as well as making different volumes.
You actually made my life more meaningful by taking up hobbies I love once again! Your spirit is contagious 😊
Love the hound handled pitcher!
Rajiv.. to help prevent the liquid in the middle, allow the soap to rest for 24 hours with a towel wrapped around the filled mold. The soap will continue to heat up for 24 hours, and that helps solidify the mixture. Freezing the soap so early delays or prevents this process. Give that a try and see if you get a higher success rate.
Your into was absolutely beautiful. As always, I thoroughly enjoyed your video, Thank you, Rajiv, for making my mind go peaceful
Thanks
Rajiv, I continue to be in awe of dang near everything you do. Watching you make soap now. Yesterday it was the 3 book recommendations. And before that, I was learning about the different kinds of oriental and tribal rugs through that very knowledgeable lady at the Brimfield Antique Flea Markets (whose name escapes me at the moment). You truly are a modern renaissance man and I thank you for sharing so much through your channel. Appreciate the motivation!
I have to say, the color palette in all your videos is perfect. It shows the level of detail and enhances that cinematographic feeling in each upload. 👏👏👏
Dear Rajiv, there are so many topics I wish you record…i have a few thing I would love to see you talking about:
- planning and taking notes
- organizing a closet ( wardrobe)
- Defining your style with accessories ( clothing)
- your morning routine
- how to read and annotate a book
- being in nature
- daydreaming :))
As a fellow Canadian I was not expecting that shoutout to Pioneer Village!! Yesssss!! What a happy and very random surprise 😁
Finally exactly what I was waiting to see you do its my dream to begin making my own soaps and I've collected all of my supplies inside my she shed house 🏡... So thanks for the inspiration... I'll tell my coworkers of your culture how excited I was to see this video today as soon as I get to work ❤
That's so nice you have a shed! Perfect place to make soap!
Thank you for responding sir I am a huge fan of yours... And yes yesterday a young lady of your family culture was slowly teaching me how to say I miss you so much ( we practiced over and over and over again because I want to know how to say it...
And yes I have a she shed and it's just waiting for me to get to it this spring season which I'm looking forward to... Everything you do I'm prepared but I hadn't started yet... Even the paper video... Gift 🎁 wrap... I guess somewhere in my lifetime we've been twins..
Thank you for the before and after’s Rajiv! God bless you ❤🎉😊 for all you do! We appreciate you a lot!
So many thoughts passed while watching this: 1. I love this simple soapmaking video - enjoyed from beginning to end 2. These simple bars of soap are gorgeous 3. I grew up in Toronto and love/miss pioneer village so much and 4. Is that the guy from Mean Girls!?!!! You’re amazing… ❤
You’re the most special and talent person! How fortunate we are to have a opportunity to access your knowledge about so many subjects. And I thought I knew few things… Oh my God I must improve a lot 🥺
Best intro of all time!