Pancake Soap Project
This Pancake Soap Project looks straight off the griddle!
Flapjack Stack Fragrance Oil smells like a fresh stack of pancakes with real maple syrup — warm, buttery, and sweet. This project stacks individual melt and pour pancake rounds, drizzles soap "syrup" on top, and finishes with a tiny butter pat embed for a project that looks almost too good to put in the shower.
What You Need:
Instructions
You will need:
- 6 Cavity Circle Mold
- 1 lb SFIC Clear Melt and Pour Base
- 1 lb SFIC White Melt and Pour Base
- Cappuccino Color Block
- Perfect Orange Color Block
- Yellow Color Block
- Flapjack Stack Fragrance Oil
- Parchment or wax paper
Follow these steps:
1
Start by melting 5 oz of white melt and pour in the microwave using 30-second bursts and stirring in between. Stir in small shavings of Cappuccino Color Block and Perfect Orange Color Block until you’ve achieved a beige/tan pancake shade.
2
Stir in 3 mL of Flapjack Stack Fragrance Oil. Fill each of the 6 circular cavities about ¼ of the way. Spray with alcohol and let the circles cool and harden before unmolding. Repeat the above steps two more times until you have a total of 18 “pancakes”.
3
Next, melt the remaining 1 oz of white melt and pour soap. Add a chunk of Yellow Color Block and stir. Pour the yellow soap into one circular cavity of the mold and let harden before unmolding. Chop this yellow soap into small square pieces. These will be the “butter pats” on top.
4
Melt 6 oz of clear melt and pour in the microwave using 30-second bursts. Stir in small shavings of Cappuccino Color Block and add 3 mL of fragrance oil.
5
Place the pancake stacks on a piece of parchment or wax paper. The next step can get messy and the paper will help a lot with clean up.
6
The “syrup” melt and pour soap is going to serve as the glue that holds the pancake stack together. Using a pipette or spoon, spread a small amount of soap in between each pancake, applying pressure to help them stick together. You should have 4 stacks of pancakes.
7
Make sure your syrup is thin and fluid. You can re-heat it in the microwave if needed to get back to a thin consistency. Pour the syrup slowly onto each pancake stack, starting in the center and moving outwards to help coat the sides. Immediately after pouring, stick a “butter pat” on top. Don’t wait too long for this step or the butter pat won’t adhere.
8
Let the soap cool fully before carefully removing them from the parchment paper.
Tutorial credits
Photographer: Hannah Wong
Pancake Soap Project
- LEVEL Intermediate
- TIME 30 minutes
- YIELD 4 Soaps
Project Description
Flapjack Stack Fragrance Oil smells like a fresh stack of pancakes with real maple syrup — warm, buttery, and sweet. This project stacks individual melt and pour pancake rounds, drizzles soap "syrup" on top, and finishes with a tiny butter pat embed for a project that looks almost too good to put in the shower.
You will need:
- 6 Cavity Circle Mold
- 1 lb SFIC Clear Melt and Pour Base
- 1 lb SFIC White Melt and Pour Base
- Cappuccino Color Block
- Perfect Orange Color Block
- Yellow Color Block
- Flapjack Stack Fragrance Oil
- Parchment or wax paper
Follow these steps:
1
Start by melting 5 oz of white melt and pour in the microwave using 30-second bursts and stirring in between. Stir in small shavings of Cappuccino Color Block and Perfect Orange Color Block until you’ve achieved a beige/tan pancake shade.
2
Stir in 3 mL of Flapjack Stack Fragrance Oil. Fill each of the 6 circular cavities about ¼ of the way. Spray with alcohol and let the circles cool and harden before unmolding. Repeat the above steps two more times until you have a total of 18 “pancakes”.
3
Next, melt the remaining 1 oz of white melt and pour soap. Add a chunk of Yellow Color Block and stir. Pour the yellow soap into one circular cavity of the mold and let harden before unmolding. Chop this yellow soap into small square pieces. These will be the “butter pats” on top.
4
Melt 6 oz of clear melt and pour in the microwave using 30-second bursts. Stir in small shavings of Cappuccino Color Block and add 3 mL of fragrance oil.
5
Place the pancake stacks on a piece of parchment or wax paper. The next step can get messy and the paper will help a lot with clean up.
6
The “syrup” melt and pour soap is going to serve as the glue that holds the pancake stack together. Using a pipette or spoon, spread a small amount of soap in between each pancake, applying pressure to help them stick together. You should have 4 stacks of pancakes.
7
Make sure your syrup is thin and fluid. You can re-heat it in the microwave if needed to get back to a thin consistency. Pour the syrup slowly onto each pancake stack, starting in the center and moving outwards to help coat the sides. Immediately after pouring, stick a “butter pat” on top. Don’t wait too long for this step or the butter pat won’t adhere.
8
Let the soap cool fully before carefully removing them from the parchment paper.
Tutorial credits
Photographer: Hannah Wong