Category: Baths/Soaps/Foams/Shampoos
Psychic Replenishment Bath
This bath utilizes the following herbs:
Rosemary
Melissa (lemon balm)
Spearmint
These may be used in varying forms:
- Make infusions of dried or fresh herbs and add in the bath
- Add essential oils to the bath
- Use a combination of fresh herbs and essential oils: although all are common garden plants, Melissa (lemon balm) is a notoriously rare and expensive essential oil.
Vervain Wish Bath
Place 2 tablespoons of vervain in the coffee maker filter cup. Add a full pot of water. As the brew drips, concentrate on your wish and visualize it coming true. Chant:
Vervain, herb of wishes sweet,
Bring my wish now, I entreat.
Draw a warm bath and add the infusion to it. Completely immerse yourself nine times, saying with each immersion.
Wish, fly quickly unto me.
As I will, so mote it be!
Step out of the tub and allow your body to dry naturally.
Come To Me Love Soap
2 cups goat’s milk soap base
2 teaspoons dried patchouli
1/4 teaspoon honey
1/2 teaspoon jojoba carrier
Equal parts of jasmine and rose fragrance
Red or pink soap dye
Finely grind patchouli herb. Melt soap base. Add herb, honey, jojoba, fragrances, and dye. Whisk until near gel. Pour in love-themed mold. Cool. Remove from mold. Air-dry on rack for twenty-four hours. Store in Saran Wrap to help hold the scent.
Kitchen Witch Hand Soap
This soap recipe is a great formula for kitchen cleanup. The mixture of tea tree oil and botanical provides a wonderful, natural antibacterial formula.
4 cups glycerin soap base
2 teaspoons dried basil
2 teaspoons dried oregano
2 teaspoons dried parsley
2 teaspoons dried sage
10 drops tea tree essential oil
4 vitamin E gel caps
Lemon, lime or orange fragrance
Dye to match fragrance
Grind herbs together. Melt soap base. Add tea tree oil and desired fragrance. Add dye. Cut gel caps and pour liquid into mixture. Add herbs. Whisk until near gel. Pour. Cool. Remove from mold. Wrap after one hour.
Winter Ritual Bath
Winter Ritual Bath
During the Winter Solstice/Christmas Season we often place too much emphasis on celebrating and sharing this joyous holiday. It is often helpful amongst all the stress to atune to a quiet, internal spirituality. To begin to do so, prepare a ritual bath with oils of rosemary, pine and orange. Add a touch of patchouli for grounding. Light gold and green candles and immerse yourself in the watery solitude to refresh your weary holiday spirit. Meditate on the Winter Goddess and her lesson of stillness. Find the cool and clean space she offers, free of clutter and activity. It is the season for centering and grounding and for defining who we really are. After the bath, take your journal and write down your goals by candlelight. Contemplate the coming re-birth and identify which direction you wish to channel your energies and focus your intentions.
-This bath was adapted by one written by Karri Allrich
Sabbat Soap
Sabbat Soap
The Sabbats are less a time of working and more a time of celebration, hence a different blend. Of course you could make different soaps for different Sabbats, altering the ingredients to match the key pints of the festival and the season, in which case you might wish to make a smaller quantity of soap and use it on a daily basis for the seven days prior to the Sabbat, in preparation for it.
1 tbsp rosemary leaves
1/2 tbsp jasmine flowers
6 drops sandalwood oil
6 drops frankincense oil
3 drops cinnamon oil
Mental and Physical Cleansing
Mental and Physical Cleansing
This is excellent for use before any ritual or indeed any time when you need to mark the division between one part of your day and another, for example the transition from your work self to your home self.
1 tbsp lavender flowers
6 drops frankincense oil
6 drops sandalwood oil
4 drops jasmine
Soaps
The basic ingredients for soap are in fact quite caustic, so it is not only easier but also more user-friendly to rework ready-made soap. The best kind to choose is a pure, unscented castille soap, although you can use this method with other kinds of unscented soaps.
First cut up (or grate) about 4 oz (1 cup) of the soap and place in a heatproof non-metallic container.
- Add about 1/4 cup (2 fl oz) of hot water and 1 tbsp of almond or apricot oil.
- Leave until cool enough to handle and then mix in with your hands. If the soap is floating on the water you will need to add more soap.
- Leave for about ten minutes, mixing occasionally by which time the soap should be soft and mushy. If it is not, place the bowl into a saucepan of boiling water and heat gently.
- When the soap, water and oil are completely blended, add any dry ingredients.
- When the mixture is cool, add any essential oils. It is important that the mixture be cool as essential oils evaporate quickly in heat. Note that essential oils should be added until they overcome the original odour of the soap, so how much will depend on the type of soap and oil you use.
- Blend really thoroughly and divide the mixture into four to six pieces, depending on the size of the soaps you finally require.
- Now squeeze these soaps, removing as much excess water as possible into the shape you require – balls, ovals or whatever – and tie in cheesecloth.
- Hang in a warm dry place until completely hard.
The soaps can then be used or wrapped in cheesecloth and kept or given away. As an aside ordinary soap will always last longer if you take it out of its wrapper and keep it in a warm dry place to get completely hard before used.
All the recipes found here are based on the above quantity of soap. As people relate to different scents in different ways, these can be adjusted according to your own preferences. Additionally you can adapt any of the following to a plain unscented liquid soap, but do be aware that liquid soaps are usually detergent based and hence not really very good for the skin. Where it says oil in the recipes it is good to use essential oils except in the case of the coconut oil in the dry skin recipe. When using herbs or other dried ingredients make sure that ou remove the really hard woody bits to make the soap pleasant to use. If you do not like textured or gritty soap, then substitute drops of the appropriate oils.
It is worth noting that when using soap you should always lather it in your hands and then wash the rest of yourself with the lather it is not a good idea to rub any soap directly onto other areas of the skin as it can be too hands and crying.