All About Trace

There are a lot of terms thrown around when you’re learning how to make soap. One of the most common is "trace." It's the point in the soap making process when the oils and lye water emulsify. Learn more about trace and the factors that affect it below.

When you pour the lye water into the oils, the mixture starts to turn slightly cloudy and milky. This is the start of the saponification process, where the lye and oils begin to react and turn to soap. With a few pulses and stirs of the stick blender, it takes on a creamy consistency. This process happens fairly quickly. Before the age of stick blenders, it could take hours for soap to reach trace! 

Notice the streaks of oil in the photo below? It hasn't reached trace. It needs more stirring and stick blending to fully emulsify. If the soap was poured into the mold at this point, it wouldn't set up. There may also be pockets of unsaponified oil and lye, which can cause skin irritation.

emulsifying oil and water to make soap | bramble berry

With a few more pulses and stirs of the stick blender, the soap will emulsify. Light trace is a solid color and the consistency of thin cake batter. Depending on your recipe, it takes about 30-60 seconds of stick blending to get there. Thin trace is the best time to add colorants and fragrances because it's easy to stir. It's also easy to pour, so it's perfect for swirl designs.

As the soap sits, it will continue to thicken. You can speed that process up by stick blending until you get the consistency you're looking for.

thin trace cold process soap | bramble
                berry

Medium trace is next - it has a thin pudding consistency. It takes about 1-2 minutes to reach. When you remove the stick blender and drizzle soap on top, you'll notice thin streaks stay on the surface. Those are referred to as "trailings." Medium trace is great for suspending embeds and heavy additives like poppy seeds. It's also great for layers because it's thick enough to support the soap that's poured on top.

medium trace
                in cold process soap | bramble berry

Thick trace is the consistency of pudding and holds its shape. It usually takes at least 2 minutes of stick blending, up to 4-5. It’s great for layers, textured tops, and soap frosting. 

thick trace cold process soap | bramble berry

Something to watch out for is false trace. That happens when the soap looks emulsified but really isn't. Most of the time it's temperature related - if you add cool lye water to oils and butters that are solid at room temperature, they can start to solidify and thicken the batch with barely any blending. You may also notice an odd texture and solid chunks forming. If that happens to you, keep stick blending until everything is smooth. That will make your batch thick and may affect your previous design, but you want it fully emulsified so there are no pockets of lye.

For your next batch, make sure the lye and oils are around 100-130° F. That keeps everything melted and gives you plenty of time to work.

Factors that can affect trace:

  • Stick blenders bring soap to trace more quickly than stirring by hand. When you're making soap, alternate between stirring and pulsing the stick blender in short bursts. Once it's at thin trace, don't continue blending unless you want to reach medium or thick trace.
  • Some fragrance oils accelerate, causing the soap to reach thick trace more quickly. Learn more in the How to Work with Misbehaving Fragrances article.
  • Adding fragrances after colorants and other additives gives you more time to work with the soap.
  • Some additives affect trace. For instance, clay can absorb water in the recipe and cause acceleration. We recommend mixing those additives with distilled water and then adding them at trace to help slow it down.
  • Recipes made with a high percentage of hard oils and butters will reach trace more quickly than soap made with mostly liquid oils. Learn more in the Formulating Cold Process Soap Recipes article.
  • Temperature also plays a part. Warmer temperatures speed up trace more than cooler temps. If your design requires a lot of swirls, drop to around 100-110° F.
  • Water discounting results in faster trace. 
  • Increasing the superfat will result in a slower-moving recipe. Learn more about superfatting soap here.

Find cold process soap making projects here.

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