Skip to content
Soap & Candle Making

Thinking about Curing and Storage

Wick Choice When something goes wrong in soap & candle making, wick choice is the most common culprit. Not always — some problems live elsewhere —...

A short site about soap & candle making. There is no shop, no email list, no affiliate links. Just notes from curing for years and slowly becoming useful at the basic things — the kind of plain knowledge that gets buried under breathless beginner guides every time you search.

The point is not to teach soap & candle making from scratch in a single page. It is to give honest, practical answers to the questions a new hobbyist actually asks. safety with lye comes up the most. fragrance and essential oils comes up next. The articles below take them one at a time.

Cold-Process Soap

When something goes wrong in soap & candle making, cold-process soap is the most common culprit. Not always — some problems live elsewhere — but checking cold-process soap first will solve a clear majority of the everyday hiccups a beginner runs into. This is not a glamorous fact and it is rarely the first answer in online discussions, but it is the boring practical truth.

So: when in doubt, look at cold-process soap. When the result is off, when the process feels harder than it should, when something has stopped working that used to work — start with cold-process soap. Even when the answer turns out to be elsewhere, the diagnostic habit of checking cold-process soap first is worth building.

Curing and Storage

Most beginner advice about curing and storage comes in the form of fixed rules — do exactly this for exactly this long, then stop. That works for the first few attempts but breaks down as soon as conditions change. Curing and Storage is more usefully understood as a set of relationships: what is happening, what you want to happen, and the small adjustment that brings the two closer.

A practical way in: take whatever you currently do for curing and storage and try one experiment. Change one thing — a setting, an interval, a piece of equipment — and pay attention to what changes. Two weeks of small experiments will tell you more about curing and storage than any single article. The articles here can offer a starting point; the rest is yours to discover by pouring.

Safety with Lye

There is a temptation to treat safety with lye as a checkbox to clear before moving on to the more interesting parts of soap & candle making. That is exactly backwards. Safety with Lye is where a real understanding of the craft starts to develop, because the small choices you make about safety with lye reflect almost everything you have learned so far. People who skip safety with lye hit a ceiling within a year and cannot see why.

The other way round: time spent on safety with lye pays compound interest. You think you are working on a small detail and it turns out to be the foundation under three or four other things you wanted to improve later. If you are choosing what to focus on next, choose safety with lye more often than you think you should.

Melt and Pour

People who have been mixing for a while almost all share the same observation about melt and pour: it gets quietly easier in the second year, and it is hard to remember exactly when. There is no breakthrough moment. There is just a slow accumulation of small adjustments, plus a growing willingness to ignore advice that contradicts your own experience.

That is good news for newcomers. melt and pour feels harder than it has any right to be in the first months, and it stays that way for longer than feels fair. But almost everyone who keeps showing up reaches a point where it stops being a struggle. If melt and pour is the part of soap & candle making you find most frustrating right now, the answer is mostly time and mixing.

That is the short version. Soap & Candle Making rewards patience more than cleverness, and almost all of the visible improvement in the first year comes from showing up regularly rather than from any single decision about gear, method, or safety with lye. Most of what is on this site assumes the same thing: that you intend to keep at it, and that you would rather be quietly competent in two years than dramatically excited for two months.


Written by

Skyler Cole

Diaformplus is a small independent blog about soap & candle making. Written and edited by Skyler Cole, based in Aarhus.

Reach out: [email protected]