Artesanal skill & experience seem to be less appreciated in these days of instant gratification. My hand-written recipe book will never be seen by others! I put too much sweat & blood & fretting over each & every recipe into it. Even after I sold my old business, I carried the danged thing round the world with me. I've always made my lotion for myself & have a few other things I still do just for my own enjoyment...
Now those scent blends I worked so hard on long ago can come to life again!
I've been approached twice in the last week to do a workshop & said, "No, or at least not yet." I have 1 stainless pot & a tiny, 2-burner stove. The ONLY way I would do it would be a plain lard/coconut/olive recipe, no "additives," and the "student" could do all the stirring. She could come back the next day and take 1/2 the soap... But I'd charge 1,200 pesos ($100) for the one-on-one.
Surely, after that much work (4 hours, plus washup), they'd lose interest. I found out the other day from a friend who is looking into soapmaking, that I'm the only one in Uruguay who starts with lard & oils & lye. Everyone else does just glycerine base or buys hobby kits of MP.
Seems like the indigenous people are so long gone down here, replaced by Europeans used to importing everything. They're AMAZED that humans can actually make soap. They're AMAZED that anyone knows how to card wool & spin & dye it...
IF I can get a big enough stock built up, I think I'll put my soaps on Mercado Libre, South America's answer to Ebay... Then, I just have to struggle with the luscious description in Castellano & wait for orders. But somehow, methinx I'll find plenty to keep me busy between my little village & the near town of 30k peeps. I sure don't want it to turn into WORK - not during my 2nd childhood...