-
Spain were a
leading soapmaker by 800, and
soapmaking began in the
Kingdom of
England about 1200.
Soapmaking is
mentioned both as "women's work" and as...
- soap in the
first century AD and
Zosimos of
Panopolis described soap and
soapmaking in c. 300 AD.
Following the Crusades,
production of this soap extended...
-
which contains calcium hydroxide, to get a hydroxide-rich
solution for
soapmaking.
However it was not
until the
invention of the
Leblanc process that high...
-
United States a
chandler is a
person in the soap and/or
candle trade.
Soapmaking and candle-making use both
similar ingredients and
similar instruments...
- a solution. Lye has
traditionally been used as a
major ingredient in
soapmaking. The
English word lye /ˈlaɪ/ has
cognates in all
Germanic languages, and...
-
yield soda ash,
which is an
important ingredient for gl****making and
soapmaking. See also gl****wort – gl****worts are saltworts, and
saltworts can be gl****worts...
- wood were
traditionally used to
produce a
strong lye (potash) fit for
soapmaking. The nuts of some
species are
palatable and were used by
Cherokee Indians...
- n_absorption_of_magnesium_sulfate.pdf Browning,
Marie (1999).
Natural soapmaking (1st paperback ed.). New York:
Sterling Pub. Co. ISBN 0-8069-6289-5. OCLC 42598586...
- treated, for chemistry. The
grease extracted from them was also
useful for
soapmaking.
Metal was more valuable; an 1836
edition of Chambers's
Edinburgh Journal...
- melt-and-pour soap crafting.
Vegan soap Grosso,
Alicia (2007), The
Everything Soapmaking Book:
Recipes and
Techniques for
Creating Colorful and
Fragrant Soaps...