Hitler turned people into soap by burning them and getting their body fat. he then took the body fat and used it to make soap.
Look out someone out there has been using dead bodies to wash themselves!
Typically, soap is not acidic. It is slightly alkaline Lye or sodium laureth sulfate is the typical active ingredient in soap
Using expired lye in cold process soap can greatly affect the process and final product.
you can use it instead of your water when mixing your soap. Butto be sure your lye mixes, dissolves all the way use some water to liquefy it first ,adjusting your liquid amount's it to the cocomilkslowly as not to burn it. check your lye calculator for proper amounts.
physical
Lye itself is caustic and can cause burns or irritation if ingested. In a finished soap product, lye is typically fully reacted with oils during the soap-making process, reducing its caustic properties. However, ingesting a large amount of soap could still lead to gastrointestinal issues or discomfort.
Kiss my Face does not disclose their specific soap-making process, but it is possible to make soap without using lye directly by using pre-made soap bases that have already undergone the saponification process. These bases are often referred to as "melt and pour" soap bases. It is also possible to make soap without lye by using alternative methods such as the cold process method with ingredients that naturally contain saponins, like soap nuts.
Tallow is used in many commercial applications; dog food and soap are the 2 most common. The recipe for lye soap has only 3 ingredients, lye, tallow and water. It's a bit dangerous to make, because when lye and water mix, it gets very hot and gives off toxic fumes. Soap makers usually mix it in an ice water bath to reduce the heat and fumes. Until electricity was harnessed to light houses, tallow was used in cheaper candles, the more expensive candles were made from wax. It was burned in rush lights, torches and lamps as well. Tallow is used to lubricate steel being rolled in steel mills, and was used to lubricate steam engines. One of it's properties is that it stays slippery when very hot, unlike many oils.
Saponification is a process that makes soap. It usually involves mixing a strong base with a triglyceride such as fat or oil. The lye soap that was used by many people in frontier areas was made by mixing ashes from burned wood with tallow; the ash provided the lye (sodium hydroxide), the tallow provided the fat.
mix lye, water, and fat in large pot. heat and stir. you will get soap.
Traditional soap-making processes involve using lye (sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide) to react with fats to create soap. However, there are now alternative methods to make soap without lye, such as melt-and-pour soap bases that have already undergone the saponification process.
Some soaps contain tallow (beef) and/or lard (pork) as the fats that are combined with sodium hydroxide (lye) to make soap. Higher end products use vegetable fats. The most common are olive, coconut, and palm.
Yes, lye soap is safe to use in fact that is what I use every day. When I was a child, my father used to make lye soap which we all used regularly. Except that it didn't have perfume, it was no different from 'store bought' soap. In previous centuries, many people made and used lye soap.
You cannot make soap without a chemical. You either need sodium hydroxide or lye. However, lye can be made from wood ash [but it takes a year]. There are plants in nature that have saponates in them, such as yucca, buckeye, soapnuts, soapwort, etc... Check with an herbalist in your area to see what grows locally.
Soap making requires following a recipe very carefully, because it is a precise chemical process. Basically, you take your oils, combine them with tallow, lye and water, and mix and mix and mix. Pour it into molds, let it set, and you have soap. Lye is a potentially dangerous chemical, so you have to be very careful when measuring. There are a lot of different recipes out there.
Lye Soap is made by combining Lye (Sodium hydroxide), Oils and water together at the right temperature and ratio as to begin saponification. Ordinary soap like in the supermarket is not this type of soap. They do not contain lye at all.
You cannot make soap without lye. Even glycerin soap is not free of lye. The Lye is a naturally occurring chemical that can be produced using simple rainwater and wood or plant ash. Soap has been made with some form of lye for thousands of years and can be traced back as far as 2800 BC. Here is a website that gives a summary of the history of soap. http://www.cleaning101.com/cleaning/history/ The glycerin is the byproduct that is left over after the commercial soapmakers skim the soap off the top. What is left is then distilled and becomes what we know as glycerin, but the glycerin results from the original process to make the soap which invariably uses lye. The removal of the glycerin from the soap along with the addition of other, God knows what, chemicals added in the commercial soap is what is harmful or drying to your skin. Lye soap (there REALLY is no other kind)is not harmful to your skin IF the soap is properly made. If too much lye is used for the fat content, it may retain some of they lye's caustic properties. Some soapmakers (homemade soap, not commercial) will "super fat" their mixture to avoid any chance that the lye's caustic properties were not neutralized. If you worry about the "chemical" use of lye in your soap, don't be. Without lye, there is no soap. Water, Lye and Fat are the ingredients in any soap. The only alternative is detergent which is made with phosphates. Phosphates are carcenogenic and are known to cause cancer. Also, don't forget the potential for chemical harm attributable to glycerin either. Nitroglycerin is made from glycerin! When used and handled properly, lye is very safe. Here is another article about the soap making process. http://www.pioneerthinking.com/glycerin.html
Along with animal fat, you could make lye soap.