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Young Ninja Group (ages 3-5)

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Eli Anderson
Eli Anderson

Where To Buy Soap Making Supplies


Your soaps can only be as good as the ingredients that go into them, which is why we only source the finest ingredients and supplies from ethical producers around the world. At Bulk Apothecary, we specialize in providing the highest-quality colors, additives, botanicals, seeds, bases, and more so you can design and produce the very best soaps.




where to buy soap making supplies



We currently stock thousands of great items, including ready-to-package soap bars and loaves and the packaging and labeling supplies you need to get your products retail ready. You can get the basic supplies for soap making, like lye, or really start to experiment with some unique, wholesale essential oils. Check out our complete line of wholesale soap making supplies and order your ingredients from an experienced, trusted provider.


As a huge supplier of wholesale soap making supplies we pride our self on offering some of the best prices in the entire USA on items like aromatherapy essential oils, melt and pour soap bases, molds, cutters, colors, unscented bases, plus ingredients like shea butter, cocoa butter, glycerin and anything else you might need for making your own lotion or soap. We do this in hopes of over time becoming the "go to" resource for our industry. It is for that reason that we recently created a blog where you will find all sorts of great information including recipes, tips and more for fun projects and valuable information on all of our aromatherapy oils. If there is information that would like to see on our blog, please don't hesitate to make suggestions to one of our courteous customer service reps. We love to hear from our customers and find out what they would like to see. This also includes product suggestions. With over 1,000 sku's and growing we are constantly scouring the globe to find new great soap supply items that we could add to our store. In fact, many of the items that we carry today were at one time suggestions from our customers. If there is an essential oil or line of melt and pour soap base that you would like to see added to our store, simply bring it up the next time you are speaking to one of our reps. They will bring it up in our next product development meeting and who knows, you might see it on our site the next time you visit our online soap making store. Lastly, if you would like to submit your favorite recipe to our blog, just shoot us over an email with a detailed description of the product along with any product pictures and a list of items that you used to make the soap. If we like your article we will gladly add it to our blog with a brief description of your company. This will then drive traffic to your website.


Wholesale soap making supplies and ingredients for professional soap makers and weekend hobbyists. We stock and manufacture only the best materials used for making handmade melt and pour or cold process soap. With over 20 years of selling quality soap making supplies online direct to consumers we are the largest online retailer of soap making supplies with expert advice. Whether you are using Base Oils and Lye to create a one of a kind cold process soap or prefer melting our easy to use bases and adding your own touch, we have all the products you need, all with free shipping!


Places to source natural soap making supplies, including oils, lye, beeswax, essential oil, honey, and herbs. Includes ideas for sourcing locally produced ingredients, what to look for, avoiding suspicious sellers, and soapmaking suppliers by country.


There are a lot of questions when you first begin making handmade soap. You not only need to learn about the soap making process but also about soap making ingredients. Oils, distilled water, lye, and all of the extras you can use to scent, decorate, or improve your batches. That involves learning how to choose the right recipes or formulate new ones based on the ingredients you want to use. I have a lot of information for you to discover on all of those topics, including free recipes. However, this piece focuses entirely on the practical matter of where to source natural soap making supplies.


Like all industries, some manufacturers produce high-quality products and materials, and some make inferior products. Yet others create fake products with misleading labeling. Often shipped to you from countries where cosmetic safety and standards are not as well regulated. Learning how to spot questionable cosmetic ingredients is a skill we all have to have when sourcing soap making supplies.


If you order from these companies, their ingredients will be offered in various quantities and price points, come with documentation and traceability and have a good shelf-life. Many professional soap makers, including myself, use them due to their reliability. You can scroll to the bottom of this piece for a list of soap making suppliers by country.


In many of my soap recipes, I include a link to where you can buy a relatively small amount of that ingredient. Online marketplaces, supermarkets, drug stores, and health food shops are great for getting enough ingredients to make small batches of soap. If you want to take up soapmaking as a regular hobby or business, you need to think bigger.


Dry goods, including spices and herbs, are soap making supplies that you can get from health food shops and ethnic food shops. Organic oatmeal, paprika, turmeric (dried or fresh), or even unusual fruit and oils. Ensure that the oil and dried products have a shelf life of at least a year, though.


To answer the enduring question, yes, you can use glass, pyrex, and stainless steel pans and tools for both soap making and food. However, they must be thoroughly cleaned between uses to avoid cross-contamination. So this way the hobby soap maker can save money on buying extra soap making equipment.


Soap molds come in different styles, and for small batches, I heartily recommend silicone molds. You can use the types made for baking, but sometimes they can be pretty flimsy. Instead, order silicone molds from specialty soap making suppliers or retailers. Silicone molds made for soap making, whether loaf or cavity style, are often thicker and reinforced. That makes them better for soap.


I answered the question of soap supplies in full detail in my How to Make Soap for Beginners E-Course, but I thought I would put it here for my viewers who want just a general idea of where to start.


Before stick blenders, soap makers would stir soap by hand or with a stainless steel spoon or wooden spoon. You can still make soap by stirring by hand but, by hand, it takes between thirty minutes to an hour for your soap to reach trace. A stick blender is one of the soap supplies I highly recommend. Here is the hand/stick blender I use.


I hope this list gives you a good start on where to buy soap making supplies. It can be daunting at first, but if you start with my recommendations and then work your way into new products it will give you an easy start without having to do hours and hours of research on soap making supplies!


A few weeks ago, I asked y'all to vote for your favorite soapmaking suppliers in the country and boy, did you respond! Almost a thousand soapmakers cast their votes! We narrowed down the best soapmaking supplier by product category, plus the best soapmaking suppliers for customer service, quality, shipping, and prices!


If you are new to using essential oils, I have a slew of articles to get you started, including my top ten recommended essential oils for beginners, how to calculate your usage rate for essential oils, and the answers to common questions about using essential oils in soapmaking.


Bramble Berry was voted the best soapmaking supplier for fragrance oils by a landslide! Bramble Berry carries over 250 different fragrance oils. They are always adding new fragrances to their catalog, so it's easy to see why!


While I don't use fragrance oils often, there are a handful of soapmaking tutorials here on Modern Soapmaking that use fragrances. Plus, you can use fragrance oil in any soapmaking recipe you wish! I love using fragrance oils to bring notes to blends that are cost prohibitive in natural fragrances, or impossible to find - like chocolate, coffee, vanilla, fruity notes, and bakery scents!


Bramble Berry does it again - they were voted the best soapmaking supplier for natural colorants and botanicals! They offer dozens of natural colorants in the form of whole botanicals, powders, and other forms. Some of my favorites include Activated Charcoal for grey and black (and to also make other colors darker!) and Madder Root for a beautiful red or pink!


Like essential oils, I love using natural colorants for a wide variety of colors! Natural colorants offer a full rainbow of colors, in muted earthy hues, which is perfect for an all-natural soapmaker. If you are new to using botanicals and herbs in soapmaking, Jo created a beautiful series about coloring soap naturally here on Modern Soapmaking.


Voted in as the best soapmaking supplier for cosmetic micas and other pigments, Mad Oils offers a full spectrum of cosmetic grade micas for your bright soapy creations! Mad Oils is super diligent about testing their micas for cold process soap stability. I love that they package their micas in jars, and that they only offer vegan-friendly colorant options - no carmine!


Without oils and butters, we wouldn't be able to make soap! It's fabulous to see one of my favorite suppliers was voted the best soapmaking supplier in this category: Columbus Foods/Soaper's Choice! Soaper's Choice offers all the staple soapmaking oils and butters in bulk sizes and attainable prices. And if you have ever given them a call, Mike does a brilliant job in helping soapmakers formulate better!


Voted the best soapmaking supplier for lye (no lye, no soap!) was Essential Depot. With a variety of size options and both kinds of lye (sodium hydroxide and potassium hydroxide), they've got you covered.


A super popular vote in our survey was soapmakers who find their lye locally at chemical supply companies and hardware stores. Other honorable mentions include Boyer Corporation, Duda Diesel, and The Lye Guy. So, if you are having a hard time finding lye locally, you know where to look online! 041b061a72


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