This is a great video. I might be a simple person, but I'm hoping one day you could make a tutorial of the exact preparation of some of these beautiful colors? I actually have the pure dyes and have wondered how do I mix them to get all those awesome colors you are showing. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and I always enjoy your videos. 🤩
I just want to say thank you for your videos!! You have started a new obsession and I love how willing you are to share your knowledge… I’ve always wanted to make bath products but found it very daunting until I found your channel! Thank you! ❤
Okay I did NOT know you could blend together powder itself to get a color. That is going to save me so much time just blooming red, blue, and yellow vs trying to get the right combination from the start. Thank you!!
I just made a dark lavender and a brilliant orange using your blooming method...I can hardly wait to make some bath bombs...of course, those two colors will make a lovely brown, so no... thank you so much for the tutorials and that we can leave the dyes in liquid form.
@@CreativeBathLab I just learned it’s not FDA approved for use in cosmetic items for sale (I was going to use them for some bath bombs in my shop) 😭 my dreams, dashed in an instant! I guess I’ll just have to use it for myself/gifts
I have learned so many new things from you! I know you have probable heard this a million time, but you're the bomb! Pun intended... Thanks for sharing and I will definitely support this channel.
I've made it several times to make the color darker by referring to the previous video. It was definitely murky and disappointing every time it was mixed into the dough. I didn't know why, so I used dye, not color powder. I learned from this video that thickening at once is much more alive! I'll have to make it different from now on
So thankful for all of this extremely awesome information. Do you sell the color combinations listed? Like 1 blue 2 greens =pink green etc? I will definitely be the first in line to purchase!!!❤❤❤❤❤
Omg bitch! This is CRAZY- last night I dreamt I made this color powder line & it was a huge success… but it ain’t true! Sadly, I don’t offer these to sell… yet… but a little birdy told me it won’t be long!
Thanks so much for showing all the colours and how they mix and everything. I've been eyeing the purples at Fizz Fairy forever and was thinking probably amethyst, but wasn't sure. Was that the amethyst USA or Canadian version? I can't believe how much it changes when it's bloomed!!! This is a great tutorial. Thank you very much. :)
Hi Dora! Haven’t commented in a while but wanted to let you know you’re STILL my reference for all things color/bathbomb 💯! We moved from Hawaii to VA and I’ve had to redo my lab/colors. I thought at one point you addressed the “lakes vs Dyes” question but I can’t find the video! Help? 😊 much appreciated always.
You are truly an inspiration to many! I appreciate you and your willingness to share your knowledge. Would it be possible to make all colors using 3 mica powders?
Love your videos! Would you be able to do a video on how to make rainbow layered embeds for bath bombs? I've tried two already and they don't work. Would love to see what you come up with.
I've finally found somewhere I can get lake dyes, can I just make up the wet mix of poly, oil, fragrance, 3ml of water and then whichever colour combo I choose straight from the pot without blooming or faffing and add to the bicarb mix to get the colour i want then add the citric after its well mixed in Thank u
Hi Dora! Do you use the color powder in bath bombs by dropping a few scoops into your bath bomb batch until desired color is achieved? Or do you use the powdered color as the whole baking soda part of your recipe? I’m trying to understand how to use it in bath bombs? If dropping in a few scoops into mix, do I remove that much bs from my recipe and replace it with color powder? Thank you for any help! I’m obsessed with your channel!
Thank you Dora!♥️ i just made my owm powder but it didn't bloom yet.. Is this really necessary?🤔 if yes, what went wrong? (I used cornstarch, hot water and the dyes from nurture soaps)
I’m a little confused on why you turned the powder into a liquid then back to a powder to use it? Why not just use small amounts of the dye directly in the bath bombs? Is there a crucial reason? Thank you!
Hi there - I recently found your channel and it's incredibly helpful! Thank you! Quick question, I find that you're one of the only people out there who bloom dyes and then make color powder for use in bath bombs. Most folks bloom the dye in small amounts each time they make a batch - and just add it in liquid form. I know you mentioned that you prefer the powder, but it seems like a lot of trouble to bloom, mix w/ cornstratch, dry, process, etc... as opposed to just blooming a teeny bit for each batch and adding wet. I'm happy to go through the full process, but wanted to understand a bit better the advantages behind it. I'd love you to share your thoughts / more info if you don't mind. Thank you! -Kerry
Great question. (I added this to the description so thanks for asking). also, please read description on why I choose powder VS liquid colorants. WHY NOT JUST BLOOM TINY AMOUNTS (like everyone else does)? First, I've always done my own thing regardless of what the "normal" is. This was addressed in an earlier tutorial & I go into great detail there. But I can think of several reasons just off the top of my head: 1. I like colorful bath bombs. So I'd have to bloom EACH color EVERY time. Um, no thanks! 2. Custom colors would be hard to make on the spot, especially using only 3 dyes. Even if I had a chart that explained how to make each specific color, I'd have to mix all those in small batches EVERY time. 3. It can be hard to achieve an EXACT shade. With color powders I see the color being mixed in & I can adjust accordingly. There wouldn't be any "Darn it, I made it too light. Now I have to bloom more!" Or worse, "Son of a b****. I made it too dark. Now I have to start over!". 4. I want to make bombs when I want to make them. I don't want to bloom a bit, put it on powder, let it dry, then come back later (& resume bath bomb-making once the powder is dry). 5. It takes the guess work AND the tedious work out of it. 6. I'm going to stop naming reasons why this is better, I think you get the picture! lol I hope that answers your question!
Hi Dora! I just got my dyes in the mail! I’m so excited I am wondering if i bloom them in water and keep them liquid if it will expire and go bad after a while in liquid form?
How do I go about making the other colors? I did your process for the red, blue and yellow and mixed it with cornstarch. Is it the same process to create the other colors? Do I add the colored powder dyes together, put them in hot water and then add them to more cornstarch?
Hi Dora, I love, love, love your videos and all of your awesome ideas. The problem I have when I make these beautifully colorful bath bombs is they make a huge mess in my tub. I add polysorbate80 and still have this problem. What am I doing wrong? I want to make those gorgeous black bath bombs but OMG, what a mess. I certainly can't sell them without a disclaimer. Help Dora!! I have the same tub you have (I noticed in your videos).
Try using liquid colorant made from dyes (like in video). Just bloom the dye in water & use that. There's no way it can make a mess as it's water soluble. (It'll just blend in with water - no residue).
@@CreativeBathLab Hi Dora, thank you for getting back to me. I use heavy oils too so maybe the mica colorant is adhering to the oils? Yes, I have better luck with the liquid dyes, I will try your recipe for creating liquid dyes. Thank you so much! 🤩
Thank you so much Dora for sharing with us such an amazing ideas. I have a question please can I mix dyes with glycerin and use it directly in bath bomb's recipe?
The question I was getting ready to ask lol. I have done a few of here colors, mine did not come out as pretty as hers, but I'm doing a run of cold process soap today and wanted to use them..
Merci pour tous vos vidéos franchement ils sont au top j’aurais juste une question c’est quoi comme colorant que vous utilisez a ce que c’est des colorants alimentaires ou autre?! J’espère que j’aurais une réponse merci d’avance
Using this method on baking soda and allowing it to dry. Should I use the entire 1/2 cup of baking soda in the bath bomb recipe or would I use the powder itself as a dye to sprinkle into the baking soda?
Hi, Do you make all of the different colors by mixing the 3 main colors in powder form or do you make all of the different colors in liquid form and then add to your base?
Thank you dora! The problems that I was curious about while making it have been solved. However, the color powder I use changes color when I make bathbomb, maybe it is a food pigment...? Is there no risk of discoloration of the color powder you use?
@@CreativeBathLab I don't use vanilla scent on bathbomb. However, the color becomes lighter when you dry it after making it. Is this reaction natural?😢
For dry recipes I recommend dry color powder like color powder, or Mica and for wet recipes like lotion or liquid bath gel or recommend liquid colorants
Hello Dora! first of all, I really love your videos. I live in Korea and am having hard time buying great ingredients like fragrance oils and micas due to the shipping.. also, even the shipping is available all the micas are too expensive for me🤯 So I try to make them according to your video! Tho I have a little question. Do I have to make the various colors by blooming the dye and then mix with starch? Or do I have to mix 3 color powder which is dyed already? If I have to blend color before mixing with starch, how can I make exact color that I want? In video it looked pretty dark when it’s bloomed.. sorry for a such long questions.. I really need help 🥹 Thank you!
Hi there. yes you have to bloom dyes then dry them on corn starch or baking soda. let them dry THEN you can mix different ones together to create the exact color you are going for
Hii thanks for the video! I have Lake dye that's only 19% dye load and the one your using is 91% So should I use alot more to get the same color saturation you have?
Hey Dora, is there anyway that you could tell me how much of each color to add to each other to make the different colors? Or if you had a ratio for doing that. Yesterday I was trying to make some of the colors you have and I wasn’t too successful😂😂
Is colorant better in liquid or powder form? Why? What sorts of things do you do with the liquid? Are there things you do with one form but not the other or???
Great question [I added this section to the description] LIQUID OR POWDER COLOR? Powder form is the best in my opinion. It's why I created color powder to use. WHY COLOR POWDER? 1. It doesn't activate bath bomb mix. 2. You can create multiple colors in 1 batch; split the batch into # of colors & color each individually. 3. You can achieve the exact shade you're going for. You see the color as you're mixing it in. LIQUID: Liquid color must be added to wet ingredients so you can't divide the batch for multi colors later (unless all the colors are in the same family & you want them to be very similar). Plus, you're dropping color in, but won't know the final shade until its all mixed up. (liquid colors are dark & it's very hard to determine the exact shade in the cup). After bath bomb batch is mixed, you can't add or subtract liquid color. This is where color powder would save you. Also, trying to mix liquid colors to get the exact shade you're going for (without really knowing what the color is to begin with) would be very tough to do. WHEN TO USE LIQUID? You should use it for soap. You could also use it for quick adjustments in bath products that don't activate from wet (perhaps a bubble bar or body scrub). **** In the end, this is your choice. One does not color better than the other. I suppose it depends on which project you're working on at that time.
When blending to create different shade do you just adjust the amount of each color to get the shade you want. And do you still mix that shade with a base if this makes sense.
you can adjust the shade in liquid state & then dry it, OR you can blend them together after they're dry to make different shades. 100% up to you. Although, I did have some issues blending the yellow after it was dry. It kept leaving little specs in the color.
J'ai une question svp si on fabrique des bombes de bain et on met que le polysorbate 80 sans mettre de l'eau combien de jours doit on laissé sécher svp ? Par ce qu'ils sont très fragile sans eau
Je n'utilise pas que du polysorbate 80. Cela vous donnerait une bombe très molle. Découvrez ces vidéos et recettes: ua-cam.com/video/UZVvdtn-b2k/v-deo.html
@@CreativeBathLab merci bcp pour votre réponse c'est gentil, j'ai pas le coco glococide puis je utiliser le coco betaine à la place ? Et es ce que je dois mettre de l'eau ou non ? Merci d'avance ❤️
This is a great video. I might be a simple person, but I'm hoping one day you could make a tutorial of the exact preparation of some of these beautiful colors? I actually have the pure dyes and have wondered how do I mix them to get all those awesome colors you are showing. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and I always enjoy your videos. 🤩
Great suggestion!
How did I miss this video 🤦♀️.. better late than never! Thanks for all the hard work you put into making these videos.. its much appreciated!
Second!
You are so welcome!
GIRL!! I have been WAITING for this one, thank you so much, Dora!
You are so welcome!
I just want to say thank you for your videos!! You have started a new obsession and I love how willing you are to share your knowledge… I’ve always wanted to make bath products but found it very daunting until I found your channel! Thank you! ❤
Youre so welcome! Glad I could help!!!
Okay I did NOT know you could blend together powder itself to get a color. That is going to save me so much time just blooming red, blue, and yellow vs trying to get the right combination from the start. Thank you!!
Thank you so much Dora. I just love your channel and the colorful projects you share with us! I appreciate you!!
You are so welcome
I just made a dark lavender and a brilliant orange using your blooming method...I can hardly wait to make some bath bombs...of course, those two colors will make a lovely brown, so no... thank you so much for the tutorials and that we can leave the dyes in liquid form.
You're welcome! Have fun!
Hello Dora get schooling again! Wow cant wait for the glitter lesson. Thank you. Kathy from Cali.😎
You are so welcome
If awesome was a person your pic would be in the dictionary 😉
Lmao 🤣
Hot Pink is absolutely the color I’ve been looking for!! Thank you!!!
Perfect!
@@CreativeBathLab I just learned it’s not FDA approved for use in cosmetic items for sale (I was going to use them for some bath bombs in my shop) 😭 my dreams, dashed in an instant! I guess I’ll just have to use it for myself/gifts
I just checked & all colors in tutorial are FDA approved. You should be fine honey!
Yay! You made the video I requested! Thank you so much; this has really helped me visualise how to make my own colours and shades. Thank you so much!!
🤗
@creativebathlab what colors did you use for the cotton candy butter and did you mix with cornstarch
Thank you for taking the time to do this and share it with us. I can't imagine how much work went into this. Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
you are amazing. now I will make my very own. you truly are God sent 😘😘😘
Best of luck!
I have learned so many new things from you! I know you have probable heard this a million time, but you're the bomb! Pun intended... Thanks for sharing and I will definitely support this channel.
You're very welcome!
thanks so much! looking forward to the glitter tutorial!
You got it!
👀 👀 👀
Another winner!! Thank you for teaching us!
My pleasure!!
Thank you for sharing this, because I always have a hard time mixing colors.
Glad it was helpful!
WOW, Thank you for all you do for us, Dora, love ya girl
Love you too, Pam!!!
I've made it several times to make the color darker by referring to the previous video. It was definitely murky and disappointing every time it was mixed into the dough. I didn't know why, so I used dye, not color powder. I learned from this video that thickening at once is much more alive! I'll have to make it different from now on
Yes & im so sorry for that! That’s my mistake! As I learn, I teach. And I’m human…. Sometimes I make mistakes.
@@CreativeBathLab I wouldn't have fallen into the world of Bathbomb without you. I am always learning a lot from your videos!😄
So thankful for all of this extremely awesome information. Do you sell the color combinations listed? Like 1 blue 2 greens =pink green etc? I will definitely be the first in line to purchase!!!❤❤❤❤❤
Omg bitch! This is CRAZY- last night I dreamt I made this color powder line & it was a huge success… but it ain’t true! Sadly, I don’t offer these to sell… yet… but a little birdy told me it won’t be long!
I love all your videos- so therapeutic and helpful, too!
Glad you like them!
Those colors are fantastic! God bless
Thank you! Cheers!
Hi! I love watching your tutorials ❤ question 🙋♀️ do you know how to make candle dyes? Thank you!!!
Please do write a book
💯💓
I would so buy this color theory book in a heartbeat!
Me too 😀♥️
Do you have a artist background Dora? Your colour theory is awesome ❤
Well thanks so much. Kind of. I paint a lot. But I don't have a formal education or background. Just like in everything else I do, I am self-taught.
Thanks so much for showing all the colours and how they mix and everything. I've been eyeing the purples at Fizz Fairy forever and was thinking probably amethyst, but wasn't sure. Was that the amethyst USA or Canadian version? I can't believe how much it changes when it's bloomed!!! This is a great tutorial. Thank you very much. :)
I love your videos! You're awesome
Glad you like them!
Fantastic info!! Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
your coloring game is 100% trying to copy you is daunting.
Thanks. It shouldn't be at all! It's very eaasy!
Hi Dora! Haven’t commented in a while but wanted to let you know you’re STILL my reference for all things color/bathbomb 💯! We moved from Hawaii to VA and I’ve had to redo my lab/colors. I thought at one point you addressed the “lakes vs Dyes” question but I can’t find the video! Help? 😊 much appreciated always.
You are truly an inspiration to many! I appreciate you and your willingness to share your knowledge. Would it be possible to make all colors using 3 mica powders?
Probably but this is very different than mica powder
I love watching your videos. They are so creative and fun! Btw - fizz fairy code doesn't work anymore..
Thanks so much for letting me know
Love your videos! Would you be able to do a video on how to make rainbow layered embeds for bath bombs? I've tried two already and they don't work. Would love to see what you come up with.
what a great idea!
Love your tutorials. I have a question. Approximately how long do you leave it to dry?
Is there a chart on how much of each color to add together to get those colors?
Thanks!
Thanks so much for your support Lisa! I am glad this tutorial has helped you so!!!!!
@@CreativeBathLab Your creativity is inspiring, Dora!
I've finally found somewhere I can get lake dyes, can I just make up the wet mix of poly, oil, fragrance, 3ml of water and then whichever colour combo I choose straight from the pot without blooming or faffing and add to the bicarb mix to get the colour i want then add the citric after its well mixed in
Thank u
Hi Dora! Do you use the color powder in bath bombs by dropping a few scoops into your bath bomb batch until desired color is achieved? Or do you use the powdered color as the whole baking soda part of your recipe? I’m trying to understand how to use it in bath bombs? If dropping in a few scoops into mix, do I remove that much bs from my recipe and replace it with color powder? Thank you for any help! I’m obsessed with your channel!
Love to hear your obsessed! 🤩 yes, u got it. Replace that much BS with the amount of color powder
Hey, I could become obsessed with this, and would like to just buy from you! lol Are you selling them yet?
Thank you Dora!♥️ i just made my owm powder but it didn't bloom yet.. Is this really necessary?🤔 if yes, what went wrong? (I used cornstarch, hot water and the dyes from nurture soaps)
I’m a little confused on why you turned the powder into a liquid then back to a powder to use it? Why not just use small amounts of the dye directly in the bath bombs? Is there a crucial reason? Thank you!
What kind of dye is this? Food coloring or something else?
Thank you!!!!!
You're welcome!
Any idea how I can make a hot pink or magenta with just nurture dyes and what ratio. Thank you ❤
?
Hi there - I recently found your channel and it's incredibly helpful! Thank you! Quick question, I find that you're one of the only people out there who bloom dyes and then make color powder for use in bath bombs. Most folks bloom the dye in small amounts each time they make a batch - and just add it in liquid form. I know you mentioned that you prefer the powder, but it seems like a lot of trouble to bloom, mix w/ cornstratch, dry, process, etc... as opposed to just blooming a teeny bit for each batch and adding wet. I'm happy to go through the full process, but wanted to understand a bit better the advantages behind it. I'd love you to share your thoughts / more info if you don't mind. Thank you! -Kerry
Great question. (I added this to the description so thanks for asking). also, please read description on why I choose powder VS liquid colorants. WHY NOT JUST BLOOM TINY AMOUNTS (like everyone else does)? First, I've always done my own thing regardless of what the "normal" is. This was addressed in an earlier tutorial & I go into great detail there. But I can think of several reasons just off the top of my head: 1. I like colorful bath bombs. So I'd have to bloom EACH color EVERY time. Um, no thanks! 2. Custom colors would be hard to make on the spot, especially using only 3 dyes. Even if I had a chart that explained how to make each specific color, I'd have to mix all those in small batches EVERY time. 3. It can be hard to achieve an EXACT shade. With color powders I see the color being mixed in & I can adjust accordingly. There wouldn't be any "Darn it, I made it too light. Now I have to bloom more!" Or worse, "Son of a b****. I made it too dark. Now I have to start over!". 4. I want to make bombs when I want to make them. I don't want to bloom a bit, put it on powder, let it dry, then come back later (& resume bath bomb-making once the powder is dry). 5. It takes the guess work AND the tedious work out of it. 6. I'm going to stop naming reasons why this is better, I think you get the picture! lol I hope that answers your question!
Hi Dora I love your visits. Can I store my colored powder in plastic jars?
Of course
Gracias hermosa ,muy buena información 👌
😘
Hi Dora! I just got my dyes in the mail! I’m so excited
I am wondering if i bloom them in water and keep them liquid if it will expire and go bad after a while in liquid form?
I'm going to say no. I've had mine in liquid form for months now & they haven't
How do I go about making the other colors? I did your process for the red, blue and yellow and mixed it with cornstarch. Is it the same process to create the other colors?
Do I add the colored powder dyes together, put them in hot water and then add them to more cornstarch?
Hi Dora, I love, love, love your videos and all of your awesome ideas. The problem I have when I make these beautifully colorful bath bombs is they make a huge mess in my tub. I add polysorbate80 and still have this problem. What am I doing wrong? I want to make those gorgeous black bath bombs but OMG, what a mess. I certainly can't sell them without a disclaimer. Help Dora!! I have the same tub you have (I noticed in your videos).
Try using liquid colorant made from dyes (like in video). Just bloom the dye in water & use that. There's no way it can make a mess as it's water soluble. (It'll just blend in with water - no residue).
@@CreativeBathLab Hi Dora, thank you for getting back to me. I use heavy oils too so maybe the mica colorant is adhering to the oils? Yes, I have better luck with the liquid dyes, I will try your recipe for creating liquid dyes. Thank you so much! 🤩
Hi love this video . Are these dyes the same as Mica powders. Thank you
Hey Dora, do you have a video explaining how you make all the different colours???
Hey Kasie, this is it!
@@CreativeBathLab no I meant like, 2 parts A + 1 parts B = aqua,
1 part C + 2 parts B = burgundy etc, but it’s cool, I can try to work it out 😊
Can you make a list of exactly how much of each colour to make all the best colours pweeees😢
Thank you so much Dora for sharing with us such an amazing ideas.
I have a question please can I mix dyes with glycerin and use it directly in bath bomb's recipe?
With water- & yes
@@CreativeBathLab watch be the measure for this combination? Thks
Thank you so much for all the inspiration. Could I also use these colors with naked Mica for cold processed soap?
I am not sure. I need to get off my butt & make CP soap already!
This may be a dumb question but when you use the bath bombs does this not stain skin?
can you use in soaps also
love your videos great for first timers like me
The question I was getting ready to ask lol. I have done a few of here colors, mine did not come out as pretty as hers, but I'm doing a run of cold process soap today and wanted to use them..
I’d think you’d want to use liquid color for that. But I’be never made CP soap so I don’t know!
Are these nurture soap dyes colour fast Dora? The eyes I have got from Australia fade really quickly especially the purples
They do fade, but it's not bad.
Ok. Where did you get the silicone bowls??? I swear I have looked high and low to no avail.
They’re linked on my Amazon page
love u dodo :')
Could you mix the powder with arrowroot powder instead of cornstarch or baking powder?
Merci pour tous vos vidéos franchement ils sont au top j’aurais juste une question c’est quoi comme colorant que vous utilisez a ce que c’est des colorants alimentaires ou autre?!
J’espère que j’aurais une réponse merci d’avance
She uses powder dyes/dissolves them in water and uses the liquid or adds to powder.
can i use mica powder instead of dye?
Sure but the colors will not be nowhere near as vibrant
Hi ,di=o you have a patron page ?
Can I ask what dyes you use I'm in the uk and don't know what dyes to use or what there called x thanks do love your channel
linked in description
Is the water used to make the Dye liquid, distilled water?
Not necessary
Thank you, How do this colors do in the sun. do they fade alot?
I havent found that they do at all. and mine are exposed to a good amount of sun
Using this method on baking soda and allowing it to dry. Should I use the entire 1/2 cup of baking soda in the bath bomb recipe or would I use the powder itself as a dye to sprinkle into the baking soda?
You’d subtract the amount of baking soda for the amount of color powder
Can you tell me how much of the dye bloomed powder do you need to use to color a batch of bath bomb mix?
Also have to say I’m obsessed with your channel and have been watching all your videos wanting to do all the projects. So inspiring. Thank you!!!
Hi, Do you make all of the different colors by mixing the 3 main colors in powder form or do you make all of the different colors in liquid form and then add to your base?
Both! But mainly I make each color powder first, then I'll mix to make others
Thank you dora! The problems that I was curious about while making it have been solved. However, the color powder I use changes color when I make bathbomb, maybe it is a food pigment...? Is there no risk of discoloration of the color powder you use?
No risk! Your products shouldn’t change colors at all (unless it’s a vanilla scent or something)
@@CreativeBathLab I don't use vanilla scent on bathbomb. However, the color becomes lighter when you dry it after making it. Is this reaction natural?😢
i have miki color powder what d you recommand when using this for your bubblebath powder?
For dry recipes I recommend dry color powder like color powder, or Mica and for wet recipes like lotion or liquid bath gel or recommend liquid colorants
Hello Dora! first of all, I really love your videos. I live in Korea and am having hard time buying great ingredients like fragrance oils and micas due to the shipping.. also, even the shipping is available all the micas are too expensive for me🤯 So I try to make them according to your video! Tho I have a little question.
Do I have to make the various colors by blooming the dye and then mix with starch? Or do I have to mix 3 color powder which is dyed already?
If I have to blend color before mixing with starch, how can I make exact color that I want? In video it looked pretty dark when it’s bloomed..
sorry for a such long questions.. I really need help 🥹 Thank you!
Hi there. yes you have to bloom dyes then dry them on corn starch or baking soda. let them dry THEN you can mix different ones together to create the exact color you are going for
Hii thanks for the video! I have Lake dye that's only 19% dye load and the one your using is 91%
So should I use alot more to get the same color saturation you have?
Common sense tells me yes, use more. But honestly, I have no idea!!! I don't use any other kind
Hey Dora, is there anyway that you could tell me how much of each color to add to each other to make the different colors? Or if you had a ratio for doing that. Yesterday I was trying to make some of the colors you have and I wasn’t too successful😂😂
Normally I add half & half, except on odd colors like olive or aqua
do i add water if i am starting with liquid base dyes? what is the recipe for that?
No water needed for liquid colorants
Is colorant better in liquid or powder form? Why? What sorts of things do you do with the liquid? Are there things you do with one form but not the other or???
Great question [I added this section to the description] LIQUID OR POWDER COLOR?
Powder form is the best in my opinion. It's why I created color powder to use. WHY COLOR POWDER? 1. It doesn't activate bath bomb mix. 2. You can create multiple colors in 1 batch; split the batch into # of colors & color each individually. 3. You can achieve the exact shade you're going for. You see the color as you're mixing it in. LIQUID: Liquid color must be added to wet ingredients so you can't divide the batch for multi colors later (unless all the colors are in the same family & you want them to be very similar). Plus, you're dropping color in, but won't know the final shade until its all mixed up. (liquid colors are dark & it's very hard to determine the exact shade in the cup). After bath bomb batch is mixed, you can't add or subtract liquid color. This is where color powder would save you. Also, trying to mix liquid colors to get the exact shade you're going for (without really knowing what the color is to begin with) would be very tough to do. WHEN TO USE LIQUID? You should use it for soap. You could also use it for quick adjustments in bath products that don't activate from wet (perhaps a bubble bar or body scrub). **** In the end, this is your choice. One does not color better than the other. I suppose it depends on which project you're working on at that time.
Esos colores se pueden usar con los jabones
Si pero para jabones siempre recomiendo color liquido
Can you use these to make cold process soap?
I think you’d want to use it in a liquid state for soap!
When blending to create different shade do you just adjust the amount of each color to get the shade you want. And do you still mix that shade with a base if this makes sense.
you can adjust the shade in liquid state & then dry it, OR you can blend them together after they're dry to make different shades. 100% up to you. Although, I did have some issues blending the yellow after it was dry. It kept leaving little specs in the color.
@@CreativeBathLab thank you so much for all you do and insight
J'ai une question svp si on fabrique des bombes de bain et on met que le polysorbate 80 sans mettre de l'eau combien de jours doit on laissé sécher svp ? Par ce qu'ils sont très fragile sans eau
Je n'utilise pas que du polysorbate 80. Cela vous donnerait une bombe très molle. Découvrez ces vidéos et recettes: ua-cam.com/video/UZVvdtn-b2k/v-deo.html
@@CreativeBathLab merci bcp pour votre réponse c'est gentil, j'ai pas le coco glococide puis je utiliser le coco betaine à la place ? Et es ce que je dois mettre de l'eau ou non ? Merci d'avance ❤️
How long does it take the powder to dry?
if you lay it out, probably a day
@@CreativeBathLab 😊 thanks
Code doesn't work
No codes for Nurture soap