Soap Quest

Soap Quest

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Home crafted natural soap made from simple ingredients. Better for our earth. Better for animals (no animal testing). Better for You! Join us on our adventure!

09/26/2025

This looks like the perfect house for me!

Photos from Soap Quest's post 07/22/2025

Custom order for a baby shower. Pink and purple with butterflies 🦋
So happy with how these turned out.
Fragrance is Honey Bunny.

Photos from Soap Quest's post 06/20/2025

Step 3.

06/20/2025

Now they’re sparkly. 😁

Photos from Soap Quest's post 06/20/2025

Made a loaf just so I could cut it up 🤣

06/18/2025

Oooh. What is this strange thing you see here?
Why, it’s soap 😳
Yes, I know, I’ve been quiet in the soap room. To be honest, I’ve got things going on in my personal life that put business on hold for a while. That’s the beauty of being in business for yourself…. It’s ok to take a break when you need. 😁
This is part one of a five step process for a special order. All will be revealed soon. 😉
🦋🩷🦋🩷🦋🩷🦋

05/26/2025
05/14/2025

Up until the 1900s, many people in the Appalachian hills relied on making their own soaps. Soap making season usually coincides with hog killing season, on account of needing the hogfat, to render into lard, to make the soap. While lard was the main ingredient in traditional Appalachian soaps, lye was also an essential ingredient. Lye was necessary for a chemical process called saponification, or in other words, turning the lard into soap. Lye was usually obtained through a method that called for collecting rainwater in an ash hopper and filtering it through wood ashes, the resulting liquid being lye. The lye, lard, and water would all be boiled together until it thickened, and left to set and form soap that would later be used for everything from personal hygiene, to laundry. Due to isolation and poverty, it was essential in Appalachian culture to learn to respect the land, flora, and fauna by utilizing what the land provides around you, and to not waste any part of the animals you sacrifice. Creating homemade soap from hogfat, rainwater, and wood ashes is a great example of that, and a tradition that is still in practice today. Soap may seem like a simple luxury we don't give a second thought to, today, but it also reminds me of the resilience and determination of our ancestors when I see photos like this one.

05/09/2025

Busy busy busy in the soap room today.
This soap is GORGEOUS! Perfect for Mom. Beautifully fresh cut rose scent. 🌹

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