Witch Hazel Soap Recipe with Shea Butter
This skin soothing witch hazel soap recipe with shea butter contains witch hazel extract renowned for its astringent, anti-inflammatory and antiseptic properties. This makes it the perfect addition to your winter skin care routine. Package it with seasonal winter elements and you have beautiful DIY Christmas gifts and stocking stuffers for friends and family this holiday season.
DIY Witch Hazel Soap
Witch Hazel has been used as a home remedy for centuries by the Japanese, Chinese and Native Americans. It is a natural astringent and possesses antibacterial, antiviral, anti-inflammatory and antiseptic properties. It’s commonly used to help ease itchy and irritated skin, acne, dermatitis, and eczema making it great choice as a homemade soap ingredient. Therefore I made this shea butter and witch hazel soap recipe to share with you!
My natural shea butter and witch hazel soap recipe makes a wonderful homemade Christmas gift idea for any of your friends or family who may suffer from easily irritated skin. It’s a natural choice that you’ll feel good about gifting. And, of course, you get to keep and use the extra bars!
Where to Buy Witch Hazel Extract
I specifically chose the Witch Hazel Extract from Mountain Rose Herbs for this homemade witch hazel soap recipe as it leads in both quality and potency. Unlike most store brands with are distilled only once and often contain more alcohol than witch hazel, the witch hazel extract from Mountain Rose Herbs has been double distilled and contains 86% witch hazel extract and only 14% alcohol. This makes it more soothing than the version found in your local store, and lacks the alcohol sting and scent. I do not know and cannot offer advice on how witch hazel with a higher alcohol content will react.
Alternately, if you prefer not to work with traditional witch hazel you can make an oil infusion instead. Simply infuse witch hazel bark in one of the carrier oils you’ll be using with this recipe beforehand.
Witch Hazel Soap Recipe with Shea Butter
© Rebecca D. Dillon
Naturally care for your skin with skin soothing witch hazel. This cold process soap recipe combines both witch hazel extract and shea butter for a nourishing soap that’s ideal for dry skin.
This witch hazel soap recipe will yield approximately 10-12 homemade soap bars depending on how they are cut and fits inside on of my DIY wooden loaf soap molds. This homemade soap recipe is not recommended for beginners. The witch hazel does significantly increase trace which may prove overly challenging to someone who doesn’t have cold process soapmaking experience under her belt. If this is your first time making homemade soap I recommend you begin with my cold process soapmaking tutorial and a simple cold process soap recipe to get you started on the path into the world of soapmaking.
Ingredients:
These are the ingredients you will need to make cold process soap with witch hazel:
2.8 oz. castor oil
7.2 oz. (76°) refined coconut oil
11 oz. sustainable palm oil
7 oz. rice bran oil
5 oz. sesame oil
3 oz. shea butter
8 fluid oz. distilled water
4.8 oz. lye/sodium hydroxide
3 fluid oz. witch hazel extract (86%)
2.5 oz. Aspen Winter fragrance oil, optional
4 Tablespoons oil soluble titanium dioxide, optional
1 Tablespoon ultramarine blue pigment powder, optional
How to Make Witch Hazel Soap
Follow these directions to learn how to make witch hazel soap with shea butter using the cold process soapmaking method:
1. Begin by measuring out the distilled water with a large measuring cup. Pour into a pitcher or other heat safe, non-aluminum container. Set aside. Now weigh out the lye using a digital scale. Slowly pour the lye into the water and mix well until all of the lye has dissolved. (Don’t forget to take proper safety precautions including gloves, goggles and a well-ventilated area!) Now set the lye-water aside to cool.
2. Next weigh out the soapmaking oils and combine in a large stainless steel pot. Heat on the stove top over medium heat until all the oils have melted then remove from heat and set aside to cool.
3. Once the ingredients reach around 85°-90°F you can begin the soapmaking process. (Alternately you can also wait for the ingredients to reach room temperature.) If you are using colorant begin by adding the titanium dioxide to the soapmaking oils then mix with a stick blender to combine.
4. Now add the witch hazel and lye-water to the oils. Mix by hand or very slowly on low with the stick blender to combine. Add the fragrance oil and mix again. It will begin to trace very fast.
5. To get the marbled blue and white look like I have I then removed a small portion of the soap and added the blue pigment, mixed, then poured back into the pot and mixed lightly to disperse some of the color but not so much that it become uniform.
6. Now spoon — as your soap will likely be rather thick at this point — the soap into your prepared mold. The white top, if desired, can be achieved by dusting the top of the soap loaf with a white or pearl mica as soon as it’s poured into the mold. Finally, set a piece of cardboard on top of the mold then set aside for 24 hours.
TIP: The fragrance oil I selected for this cold process soap combined with the alcohol present in the witch hazel does accelerate trace. This fragrance oil also turns the soap brown. To slow trace, omit the titanium dioxide and try using a different fragrance oil without vanillin content.
7. Once the saponification period has passed you can now unmold the soap loaf and cut it into bars. Set the bars aside to cure 3-6 weeks then wrap and label as desired.
Soap Packaging Ideas
It’s easy to package this homemade soap for holiday gifts. You can wrap yours in ribbon then add a scrapbook element to the front. Alternately, you can also tie a Christmas themed tag or ornament around the soap bars.
If you like the Christmas tree tag I used on one bar of my homemade witch hazel soap be sure to check out my tutorial for easy DIY Christmas ornaments here.
For other great ways to package soap, explore my post with soap packaging ideas here.
Feedback on This Cold Process Soap Recipe
One reader shared her experience with my homemade witch hazel soap recipe. Marilyn emailed “Oh my, I’m so impatient. I couldn’t wait to check the soap qualities. What a luxurious stable lather! …I haven’t soaped with Witch Hazel, or sesame oil before. Wow, this Is a keeper, for sure. I’ve made other recipes with a similar fatty acid profile but what makes this so incredibly luxurious? Do you think it’s really the witch hazel? Or the high percentage of Shea butter? Or I’ve never soaped with sesame oil? Would love to try the exact same recipe without the witch hazel, because if that’s the secret, then mountain rose has something pretty special.”
Looking for more uses for witch hazel extract? Discover more ways to use witch hazel here.
You can explore more of my homemade soap recipes by visiting my DIY Bath and Body Pinterest board as well as my Simply Soapmaking Pinterest board for additional recipes from both myself and other great soapmakers across the web.
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10 Comments
Rita McClure
December 3, 2014 at 9:27 pm
THANK YOU
jana
December 17, 2014 at 4:28 am
Can i just buy from you 🙂
Rebecca D. Dillon
December 17, 2014 at 8:31 am
Sorry, I’m not offering this one for sale.
Marilyn
January 13, 2015 at 1:12 pm
Rebecca,
I can’t wait to make this for Christmas gifts this year. I want to trial it ahead of time. Where did you get the white or pearl mica and which did you use white or pear, in the picture?
Kat
January 31, 2015 at 7:16 pm
That looks lovely. I’m wondering though – if this is for people with sensitive skin, why add a synthetic fragrance and synthetic colorants?
Rebecca D. Dillon
February 1, 2015 at 3:29 pm
The choice to use fragrance and/or color is a personal one. They can easily be omitted. I made mine for gifts this past Christmas so I chose to spice mine up a bit.
cathy
September 16, 2015 at 8:43 pm
i was woundering why the soap in this recipe turned out soft i did a rebatch and it is still soft
Rebecca D. Dillon
September 19, 2015 at 11:23 am
This recipe wasn’t soft for me. Was everything weighed correctly? It’s hard to troubleshoot what might have gone wrong without more information.
Charmae
November 17, 2015 at 4:55 pm
Hi I was wondering if the witch hazel recipe could be made using the hot process method?
Rebecca D. Dillon
November 17, 2015 at 7:35 pm
I can’t advise on this as I’ve never made hot process soap. Sorry.
Comments are closed.