If you try my way you'll get much better results doesn't matter if you've got soft to hard water
Thankyou
If you try my way you'll get much better results doesn't matter if you've got soft to hard water
You're welcome.
I appreciate the advice, SpeedyPC, but I've basically done what you've suggested in the past and it didn't matter. MWF still didn't work well for me. Would you be willing to run an experiment, take photos, and post results?
Photo coming soon while I start warming the brush to get everything ready, etc etc etc
Great! When you take pictures, please try to take an extreme close-up with an object that can be used for the scale of the picture. I used a millimeter-marked scale, but a standard coin or something else would work fine.
I'll do my very best what image size frame do you want???
Room temperature doesn't make any difference trust me and if you think about living in UK throughout the whole season you go mad about room temperature, and believe me when I tell you this it does take a bit of understand of HOW MWF really works. I have no issue at ALL building a lather from soft to hard water please trust me Warm water straight from the tap help loosen the top layer of soap not the whole puck, you can try cold water wouldn't make any difference.
Be extra careful when adding a small amount of water say a few drops after you've completely air out the soap, MWF doesn't like having too much water which is very hard to find the right amount of water. Because if you add too much water the lather will collapse and start to get bubbly and start to fade the lather will disappear, so you really need to sit down and pay close attention of how MWF really works if you don't open your eyes
I didn't think of this option @rockviper I'm going to give this a spin, by slowly building the lather onto puck but I still need to completely air out as much bubble as possible to thicken the lather.Loading directly on the puck is the way MWF was meant to be used. The more it gets used on a regular basis, then better it is.
Loading directly on the puck is the way MWF was meant to be used. The more it gets used on a regular basis, then better it is.
The "magic" of daily use with just about any triple-milled soap is that all you're doing is helping to rehydrate the puck. Triple milling removes a LOT of the moisture that would otherwise be found in the soap.
Loading directly on the puck is the way MWF was meant to be used. The more it gets used on a regular basis, then better it is.
I didn't think of this option @rockviper I'm going to give this a spin, by slowly building the lather onto puck but I still need to completely air out as much bubble as possible to thicken the lather.
I often have difficulty loading the very last bits of a soap when it starts to fall apart and crumble. This happens earlier in a soap's death throes if it has been grated, but happens with just about everything in my experience. Shaving off tiny bits to use each day would present, to me, similar issues. That's why I advocate loading from the puck or using the puck as a stick.
Actually building lather on a puck is something I have done many times. Lots of goodness resulted but there is a fair bit of increased product usage.