The Art Of Making Soap - A History Of Soap
Making
Below is a historical introduction to the
art of soap making extracted from a book written in the late
1800's entitled "The Art Of Making Soap & Candles"
...
Pliny speaks, among others, of a plant growing on a rocky
soil and on the mountains, with prickly and rough leaves. Fuchs
was of the opinion that it must have been the soap-wort, still
used in Italy and France. Others imagine that it was the
Gypsophila Struthium, of Linne', a plant with a tender stem and
leaves like those of the olive tree; but Beckmann places no
confidence in any of these surmises, but rather favors the idea
that it was a plant growing in Syria. Beanmeal was also
employed for cleansing purposes.
Large quantities of fullers' earth (silicate of alumina), at
the same time were moreover used, and clothes, dressed with
this earth, were stamped upon by the feet, a process by which
grease is partly absorbed and partly scoured off.
The poor at Rome, moreover, rubbed it over their clothes at
festivals, in order that they might appear brighter. Some of
these earths were employed in the baths instead of nitrum, and
De la Valle, who traveled through the Levant at the beginning
of the last century, states that the practice was still in
vogue and adopted by persons of the highest distinction; they,
in fact, never bathing without it.
It has, furthermore, been authentically established, that in
the eighth century there were numerous soap factories in Italy
and Spain, but it was not till the close of the twelfth and
commencement of the thirteenth century that this branch of
business was gradually introduced into France.
The first factories were founded in Marseilles, an old
colony of the Phenicians, a race half Grecian, half Egyptian,
energetic, intelligent, active, particularly partial to
industrial arts and commercial enterprises. This ancient city
was, as it were, the cradle of soap manufacturing.
Here all the crude materials for this purpose were abundant.
The fecundity of its soil gave rise to the olive tree of the
Orient, as well as to the vegetable sodas, whilst its harbor in
the Mediterranean peculiarly favored and hastened the
prosperity of the soap manufacturers and traders. There has,
indeed, been gradually a considerable increase in the demand
for soap, attributable mainly to the method of bleaching linen,
first adopted in the seventeenth century, at which time this
new branch of manufacture was imported from the West Indies,
and the important application of the chlorine for bleaching
textile fabrics had not been discovered.
Notwithstanding the richness of its soil, and its natural
resources, Marseilles, nevertheless, could not furnish the
crude materials in quantities sufficient to supply the wants of
her soap manufacturers, and consequently, ere long, became
tributary to Spain and Italy, to the former for the oils and
vegetable sodas; to the latter for the oils only.
From France, the art of manufacturing soap was introduced
into England at an unknown epoch prior to the year 1500. Soap,
for a long time, was there made partly according to the French
method, viz., with sodas obtained from the incineration of
seashore plants, and partly after the German plan with potash
and salt, which plan is still followed by some old-fashioned
soap makers. Almost all kinds of soap were thus manufactured in
England, whilst in France the olive oil soap only was
produced.
About the first decennium of the present century, however,
palm oil and cocoa oil soaps have been made in Paris, where
also the art of manufacturing toilet soaps has scarcely been
superseded by either English or American manufacturers.
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Soap Recipe#5: Vanilla Cream
Soap
2 oz. clear melt
& pour soap
1 oz. white melt & pour soap
½ tsp. powdered milk
6 drops vanilla cream fragrance oil
Follow basic
instructions for melt & pour
soaps.
*****
Soap
Recipe #6: Gardener’s Soap
8 oz. white
soap, grated
¼ cup milk
2 tsp. shredded luffa
¼ tsp. lavender fragrance oil
1/8 tsp. rosemary fragrance oil
Follow basic
instructions for melt & pour
soaps.
Source:
"Soap Recipes: 58
Recipes For Cold & Hot Process
Soaps"
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The article "The Art Of Making Soap - A History Of Soap
Making" continues on the next page ...
Recommended Resource:
The "Art Of Making Soaps And Candles" was written in the
late 1800's by a leading expert at that time and also provides
factual and productive information from some of the top
manufacturers, inventors, chemists and established authors from
the 1800's.
This publication deals not only with the manufacture of
soaps and candles, but it also includes illustrations and
critical explanations of the various manipulations and
mechanical arrangements by which they are effected, thus
compiling a condensed narrative full of information that had
never been published previously.
Get it here: The Art Of Making Soap &
Candles
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