17 diy Soap gemstone ideas

Stunning Jewel Soap

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Multi-colored soaps that look like precious gemstones are almost too pretty to use. Multi-colored soaps that look like precious gemstones are almost too pretty to use.



DIY Gemstone Soap Tutorial | How to Make Easy Gem + Mineral Shaped Soap Rocks | Dans le Lakehouse

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Easy DIY Gemstone Soap Tutorial! Learn How to Make Gemstone Soap Rocks Using Organic Melt & Pour Soap Base. Easy DIY Soap Recipe to Make Your Own DIY Soap Bars Shaped Like Gemstones. A Great Gemstone Soap DIY Tutorial – Use Your Own Essential Oils! #gemstonesoap #gemstone #soapdiy #diysoap #diygemstonesoap #essentialoils I think you are going to LOVE today’s DIY gemstone soap tutorial! It’s easy to make, looks gorgeous, and it’s something that can be used and enjoyed.



Feel Like A Bonafide Artisan By Making This Beautiful Gemstone Soap

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
This Clever Soap DIY Will Really Soften Up Your Skin This is “all-natural” talent.





Gemstone Soap DIY (Two Ways!) – A Beautiful Mess

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Diamond Soap Hi, friends! I don’t have a lot of experience making soaps, so when it came to creating this…



Gemstone Soap DIY (Two Ways!) (A Beautiful Mess)

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Hi, friends! I don’t have a lot of experience making soaps, so when it came to creating this DIY, I was surprised to find how relaxing and fun it was to create different colors and combinations for th Hi, friends! I don’t have a lot of experience making soaps, so when it came to creating this DIY, I was surprised to find how relaxing and fun it was to create different colors and combinations for th



Geode Soap Tutorial for Valentine’s Day Gifts or Just Because – Soap Deli News

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Make your own geode soaps with this geode soap tutorial that teaches you how to make homemade soaps that look like crystal geode soap rocks!





DIY Bath Bombs Three Ways

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
DIY Bath Bombs Three Ways | Calming lavender, gemstone and mermaid capsule bath bombs have never been easier to make at home. Plus with so many ways to customize these bath bombs, mixing up a batch is the perfect activity for a party or a play date. #diy #crafts #bathbombs #beauty #realsimple Create your own moment of zen.



DIY Soap Stones for the Spa Lover- Room for Tuesday

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
diy-gemstone-soap-gifts Looking for an easy, beautiful and impressive gift for the spa lover on your list? Try these DIY soap stones that are almost too pretty to use!



DIY Gemstone Soap Tutorial | How to Make Easy Gem + Mineral Shaped Soap Rocks | Dans le Lakehouse

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Easy DIY Gemstone Soap Tutorial! Learn How to Make Gemstone Soap Rocks Using Organic Melt & Pour Soap Base. Easy DIY Soap Recipe to Make Your Own DIY Soap Bars Shaped Like Gemstones. A Great Gemstone Soap DIY Tutorial – Use Your Own Essential Oils! #gemstonesoap #gemstone #soapdiy #diysoap #diygemstonesoap #essentialoils I think you are going to LOVE today’s DIY gemstone soap tutorial! It’s easy to make, looks gorgeous, and it’s something that can be used and enjoyed.





Gemstone Soap DIY (Two Ways!) – A Beautiful Mess

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Gemstone Soap DIY (Two Ways!) | A Beautiful Mess | Bloglovin’ Hi, friends! I don’t have a lot of experience making soaps, so when it came to creating this…



DIY Lotus Flower Ring Holder – Yay for Handmade!

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Gemstone Soaps – GoodHousekeeping.com Plus, they’re seriously easy to make.



Jab?n de glicerina transparente

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Plus, they’re seriously easy to make.





DIY Gemstone Soap

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
This DIY gemstone soaps are made with all natural, clean ingredients and they’re super easy to make. They would make the PERFECT gift idea for a bridal shower, or to give all the guests! Learn how to make your own homemade crystal soaps with just a few easy instructions! #DaniBarbe #DIY #DIYSoap #HomemadeSoap #Crystals We’ve been trying to move towards cleaner body care products. We have sensitive skin so added fragrance and ingredients tend to irritate it. This gemstone soap was inspired by Dani Barbe’s gorgeous crystals! We recently used them in our DIY Crystal Terrarium post if you need a refresh. These soaps are not only made from more natural, clean ingredients but they’re super easy. They would make the perfect gift for a bridal shower, to give all the guests! You don’t have to add any fragrance to your soaps but we decided to use peppermint essential oil, as it’s very calming and crowd pleasing. We also used shea butter soap because it’s ultra moisturizing without clogging pores! What you’ll need Diamond silicone mold Glycerin soap base Shea butter soap base- or any other white soap base Food coloring Glass measuring cup Peppermint essential oil (optional) Directions Step 1: For each color you’ll need four blocks of the glycerin soap base. Add four blocks to your glass measuring cup and microwave for 30 seconds until it’s melted completely. Step 2: Add food coloring to the mixture until your desired color is met, then add about 3 drops of peppermint essential oil. Stir. Step 3: Pour your mixture into the silicone mold. It will make about two diamond soap. Step 4: Repeat with your other color(s). We decided to go with blue and purple. Step 5: Place the silicone mold in the freezer for one hour. Remove from mold and chop into large pieces. Step 6: Add pieces to the mold. We decided to make three purple and three blue total. Step 7: Melt six pieces of the white shea butter soap base in your glass measuring cup. 40 seconds should do the trick! Step 8: Pour the white soap into the silicone mold, over the colored pieces. Step 9: Let sit in the freezer for an hour, then remove them from the mold. These soaps probably only took two and a half hours to make and that’s mostly due to time in the freezer. We love how they turned out! Written & photographed for danibarbe.com by Britta & Carli Garsow



DIY Sea Mud & Tea Tree Soap

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
How to make soap the easy way without lye. Essential oil melt and pour soap recipe. Learn how to make homemade soap for beginners with this easy melt and pour soap making tutorial with tea tree essential oil. This beginner soap recipe is WAY easier than you might think. Plus I show you how to turn a soap making fail into a soapmaking success with this natural tea tree & sea mud soap recipe that looks like gemstones. Discover how to make your own DIY gemstone soaps now at Soap Deli News blog. Part of coming up with fun new projects for my blog, Soap Deli News, includes experimenting and thinking outside the box. There’s the “right way” to do things that I know will work and then there’s that “well, what if…” My DIY Sea Mud & Tea Tree Soap is one of those experimental projects. It didn’t start out so well… This was my experiment fail. Trying to make soap embeds with a LOT more than the recommended amount of sea mud in a melt and pour soap base… well. As you can see



Gemstone Soap DIY (Two Ways!) (A Beautiful Mess)

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Gemstone Soap DIY (Two Ways!) | A Beautiful Mess | Bloglovin’ Hi, friends! I don’t have a lot of experience making soaps, so when it came to creating this DIY, I was surprised to find how relaxing and fun it was to create different colors and combinations for th





Easy DIY Crystal Gemstone Soaps

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Gorgeous DIY crystal gemstone soaps only look difficult to make, but with an easy tutorial, even the beginner can make gorgeous rock soaps sure to impress! Gorgeous DIY crystal gemstone soaps only look difficult to make, but with an easy tutorial, even the beginner can make gorgeous rock soaps sure to impress! Showering is one of my absolutely favorite things to do in this world. And taking a shower after a long day of toiling outside and sweating like crazy is just the best thing ever. The hot water hitting sore muscles and washing away the day’s dirt leaving you with a blissfully soft and clean body? That feeling is my version of heaven. Being somebody who is personally obsessed with showering, I invest a lot of time and have a healthy budget for making and purchasing bath and body type of goods. I’ve got sugar scrubs and salt scrubs and hair masks and face masks and foaming soaps and you freaking name it. I’ve even bought or made nice soaps for others as a polite request that need, erm, a little motivation to soap up… And it almost always works, at least for a while, because everybody loves to try new things, right? I mean, a boyfriend and I got into a light-hearted tiff about who got to run the brand new vacuum cleaner many, many years ago. He won, he did run it first and then never touched it again 🙂 When I first started making my DIY soaps I was amazed at how easy it was. Way back in the day, when I was still in college and back home for Christmas, my sister, a family friend and I got a soap making kit from the craft store. We made these awful bars of soap and I remember how badly I burned my eyes with a chemical type of vapor, or something. It was awful and I still have no CLUE what in the world that was! But after that little experience, I was all, making soap? Never freakin’ again. That business is straight up DANGEROUS, haha! And it literally took me at least 12 years before I was willing to try it again. And I think the catalyst was seeing CHILDREN making soap in a video. If they can do it without their parents worrying they will go blind, perhaps I should give it another go? And so I did and the rest is history. I have been obsessed with making my own soap ever since and when I recently moved I made darn well sure to bring with me every single bit of soapmaking gear I have acquired over the years. No room for my shoes? Oh well, grab the melt and pour! Today we’re going to be making some absolutely gorgeous crystal gemstone soaps that only LOOK like they’re going to be crazy difficult. It’s another one of those things I kind of wanted to make but worried would be too difficult but, guys, it so isn’t. It’s actually the EASIEST and most FUN soap making project because you can just sort of go nuts and mad science this business up with always decent results and very often absolutely stunning ones. So if you’re new to soap making and you’re worried you can’t accomplish these gorgeous crystal gemstone soaps, put that worry to bed because even if this is your first EVER soap making project, I’m going to give you the tips to totally NAIL IT! For this project you will need: Gemstone Soap Molds Clear Melt and Pour Soap Base White Melt and Pour Soap Base Fragrance Oils or Essential Oils Microwave Fragrance Oils Mica Soap Colorant Gel/Liquid Soap Colorant Spray Bottle with Rubbing Alcohol Loose Gold Leaf (optional) These are our molds. Aren’t they genius? Now, heads up, your very first go around these molds are going to be quite a bit difficult to remove the soaps from them. But, luckily, each soap thereafter will pop out pretty darn easy as you please. Not just meant for soap, they can be used for resin projects, too! Looking at crystals and rocks and stuff in the gift shop of a cavern I visited with my nephews during our 2018 Texas Tour (our annual 3-week summer vacation!) I noticed how pretty the colorful stones were and how the really rough and natural looking stones weren’t s solid color. There was often a lighter and darker hue of the same color plus some clear, some white and sometimes even veining of gold. To imitate this as well as we can we’ve got a whole lot of stuff going on. In the photo above, you can see the colors I used for my amethyst inspired stone including violet colored mica soap colorant and purple gel/liquid soap colorant. But ‘a whole lot of stuff’ doesn’t translate to difficult… …it just translates to messy 🙂 And I have also found that messy very often translates to FUN! So buckle up, kiddos, because this is definitely a fun soap-making ride, even if it is your first rodeo (translation, beginners welcome!) As far as craft supplies go, mica soap colorant can be a bit pricey. But I am a total cheapskate when it comes to a lot of things, and so you can trust me when I say it’s a craft supply that is definitely worth the price. You’ll get gorgeous colors that have just a little bit of glitz and luster AND a little bit of mica goes a LONG way. In fact, so that I don’t accidentally overdo it, I’ll take an itty bitty spoon and sprinkle just a touch on top of my soap right before it is melted. Because once the soap is melted and I try to add colorant I get all frantic, trying to hurry and I always, always drop more in than I had meant to. And it’s not going to make the color any prettier, it’s just going to use more and essentially waste what you didn’t need to toss in there. If you melt your soap and find that it isn’t colorful enough, you can always add



10-Minute DIY Gemstone Soaps

17 diy Soap gemstone ideas
Make your own DIY Gemstone Soaps in around 10 minutes! These sparkly gem and jewel soaps shimmer and shine, and they smell AMAZING (in any fragrance your heart desires!)! via @hiHomemadeBlog Gorgeous DIY crystal gemstone soaps only look difficult to make, but with an easy tutorial, even the beginner can make gorgeous rock soaps sure to impress! Showering is one of my absolutely favorite things to do in this world. And taking a shower after a long day of toiling outside and sweating like crazy is just the best thing ever. The hot water hitting sore muscles and washing away the day’s dirt leaving you with a blissfully soft and clean body? That feeling is my version of heaven. Being somebody who is personally obsessed with showering, I invest a lot of time and have a healthy budget for making and purchasing bath and body type of goods. I’ve got sugar scrubs and salt scrubs and hair masks and face masks and foaming soaps and you freaking name it. I’ve even bought or made nice soaps for others as a polite request that need, erm, a little motivation to soap up… And it almost always works, at least for a while, because everybody loves to try new things, right? I mean, a boyfriend and I got into a light-hearted tiff about who got to run the brand new vacuum cleaner many, many years ago. He won, he did run it first and then never touched it again 🙂 When I first started making my DIY soaps I was amazed at how easy it was. Way back in the day, when I was still in college and back home for Christmas, my sister, a family friend and I got a soap making kit from the craft store. We made these awful bars of soap and I remember how badly I burned my eyes with a chemical type of vapor, or something. It was awful and I still have no CLUE what in the world that was! But after that little experience, I was all, making soap? Never freakin’ again. That business is straight up DANGEROUS, haha! And it literally took me at least 12 years before I was willing to try it again. And I think the catalyst was seeing CHILDREN making soap in a video. If they can do it without their parents worrying they will go blind, perhaps I should give it another go? And so I did and the rest is history. I have been obsessed with making my own soap ever since and when I recently moved I made darn well sure to bring with me every single bit of soapmaking gear I have acquired over the years. No room for my shoes? Oh well, grab the melt and pour! Today we’re going to be making some absolutely gorgeous crystal gemstone soaps that only LOOK like they’re going to be crazy difficult. It’s another one of those things I kind of wanted to make but worried would be too difficult but, guys, it so isn’t. It’s actually the EASIEST and most FUN soap making project because you can just sort of go nuts and mad science this business up with always decent results and very often absolutely stunning ones. So if you’re new to soap making and you’re worried you can’t accomplish these gorgeous crystal gemstone soaps, put that worry to bed because even if this is your first EVER soap making project, I’m going to give you the tips to totally NAIL IT! For this project you will need: Gemstone Soap Molds Clear Melt and Pour Soap Base White Melt and Pour Soap Base Fragrance Oils or Essential Oils Microwave Fragrance Oils Mica Soap Colorant Gel/Liquid Soap Colorant Spray Bottle with Rubbing Alcohol Loose Gold Leaf (optional) These are our molds. Aren’t they genius? Now, heads up, your very first go around these molds are going to be quite a bit difficult to remove the soaps from them. But, luckily, each soap thereafter will pop out pretty darn easy as you please. Not just meant for soap, they can be used for resin projects, too! Looking at crystals and rocks and stuff in the gift shop of a cavern I visited with my nephews during our 2018 Texas Tour (our annual 3-week summer vacation!) I noticed how pretty the colorful stones were and how the really rough and natural looking stones weren’t s solid color. There was often a lighter and darker hue of the same color plus some clear, some white and sometimes even veining of gold. To imitate this as well as we can we’ve got a whole lot of stuff going on. In the photo above, you can see the colors I used for my amethyst inspired stone including violet colored mica soap colorant and purple gel/liquid soap colorant. But ‘a whole lot of stuff’ doesn’t translate to difficult… …it just translates to messy 🙂 And I have also found that messy very often translates to FUN! So buckle up, kiddos, because this is definitely a fun soap-making ride, even if it is your first rodeo (translation, beginners welcome!) As far as craft supplies go, mica soap colorant can be a bit pricey. But I am a total cheapskate when it comes to a lot of things, and so you can trust me when I say it’s a craft supply that is definitely worth the price. You’ll get gorgeous colors that have just a little bit of glitz and luster AND a little bit of mica goes a LONG way. In fact, so that I don’t accidentally overdo it, I’ll take an itty bitty spoon and sprinkle just a touch on top of my soap right before it is melted. Because once the soap is melted and I try to add colorant I get all frantic, trying to hurry and I always, always drop more in than I had meant to. And it’s not going to make the color any prettier, it’s just going to use more and essentially waste what you didn’t need to toss in there. If you melt your soap and find that it isn’t colorful enough, you can always add