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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Snow Globe Soap

tighter shot
First you’ll need some wee little toys, small enough to fit inside an ice-cube tray.
Next you’ll need to run to your nearest craft store for a brick of clear glycerine, some soap dye in blue, some soap scent and some soap glitter. From your kitchen you’ll need the microwave, a dish to melt and pour things in, a potato peeler, a cheese grater and a spoon for stirring. You’ll also need a bar of white soap.
supplies-mini.jpg
fresh cut glycerine cubes
First you’ll cut up the glycerine into 1-inch chunks. Then microwave them on high for about 40 seconds. After that, microwave in 10 second intervals (stirring in between) until your soap is a nice gloppy liquid.
After your soap is melted you can add your blue dye, scent and glitter. I added two drops of blue to get this sky color. Just like food-coloring, it’s always best to err on the not-putting-enough-color-in side than the oh-no-I’ve-put-too-much side. You can always add more dye. Much harder to get it out.
melting the glycerine cubes
Pour your glycerin mixture into each section of the ice cube tray leaving about a quarter inch at the top. You will need this space later to add the snow floor and another layer of glycerine to seal the snow floor to the rest of the globe.
sprinking snow like white cheddar
After you’ve poured the glycerine, let it cool just enough to form a thin skin on the top. It doesn’t take long. Maybe a minute, maybe a few seconds. I didn’t time it. I was too busy grating my snow to really pay attention. Then situate your toy in each ice cube block by poking it with a toothpick or pin. As it hardens it will be easier to manipulate so your toy is standing up straight and not floating dead at the top. Just make sure they are upside down because the “top” will be the “bottom” when you are done.
topped with soap shavings
After all your toys are arranged, you can add your snow. We made our soap snow by peeling off curls from a regular bar of white bath soap. I also made some smaller snow shavings by grating it with a cheese grater. Soap is really easy to manipulate. I expect kids of all ages will get a kick out of this part.
When you sprinkle the snow on top, make sure to leave spaces that you can later fill in with a cap of glycerine. I made the mistake of packing the snow a little too tightly on a few of my cubes and they later fell apart because the snow shavings were not melted and there was nothing to hold them to the top part of the snow globe. Of course you could melt opaque white soap instead of using curls for snow but I sort of liked my shavings. They look really pretty in the end. Once you’ve added the snow shavings, top each cube off with a little more glycerine.
meanwhile at the soap factory...
Next you’ll pop it in the freezer for about twenty minutes or until the cubes are cool to touch from the underside of the ice cube tray (be sure to check the middle). Then you just up-end them like you would ice cubes and your little wee snow globes will be sitting pretty, all ready to be packaged!
like jello! but not.
I used a small paring knife to shave off some of the irregularities on the bottom but that was purely aesthetic. Once you wrap them, they look almost good enough to eat. Which reminds me, make sure your kids know that these are not candy. Unless of course you want to teach them a lesson about what happens when they say naughty words but that’s another blog post for a different website.
Snow Globe Soap!
You can wrap these any old way you want, but I chose clear cling wrap because I wanted my cool little glistening gems to show through the wrapping. I printed up some home made labels and tied them up with string. Now they will be perfect for mailing off to those distant relatives, stashing inside of stockings and saving for that bath time that needs a little something special.
sudsy

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