Instructions:
Sift your dry ingredients together and set aside.
Melt and mix wet ingredients. Pour into the dry mix.
Making sure you mix it (with your hands, not tools!)
as well as you can.
You will get a slight clumping action while mixing
the oil, not enough to hold the shape firmly though.
This can be your guide as to how much spritzing you
will do with the witch hazel.
(Beforehand, prepare a small spritzer bottle with
straight Witch Hazel.) While stirring the mixture
with one hand, start spritzing your mixture lightly.
You'll get a slight fizzing reaction, don't panic,
this is normal. Do not over moisten your mixture.
Just enough so your mixture will clump in your hand
when squeezed together and hold it's shape when dropped
back into the bowl.
This is where I add my scent (I used Suz's Angel)
and colorant to the mixture. Blend well with your
hand to incorporate the color and scent.
Now your ready to pack into molds. (About half way
through packing into molds, you might need to spritz
the remaining mixture again, just enough to moisten
as it dries while your busily packing.)
I have taken pics of me packing into molds and a
few of me doing them in a meat baller.
I am hoping you can see that they aren't that difficult
to make using the baller. You just have to over pack
both halves of the baller and squeeze very tightly
together.
As you can see by the pics my baller broke which
actually makes getting the bombs out of the baller
much easier. I'm not recommending you break yours,
but it was actually a good mishap.
In the pictures you will see I split the mixture
in half and colored one yellow the other blue.
Let your bombs sit in the molds for a couple of hours,
turn out onto waxed paper or any covered shelf where
they can sit for 24 hours to completely dry.
I never attempt these in the summer when you have
humidity, it's a complete waste of my time. I have
tried numerous techniques to accomplish this in the
summer to no avail even with AC and using the oven
to aide in drying time. I have just resorted to the
fact that these are a winter project. |