In this season of cold and flu, I have renewed my emphasis on personal hygiene with my children. My 3 year old, however, has a major aversion to soap. He will willingly wash his hands and take baths, but fights any type of soap or shampoo.
I can sneak soap into the bath, which takes care of hair and body, but I needed a solution for his unwillingness to use soap to clean his hands before meals and after using the washroom. "Treat soap" (or in our bathroom "car soap") has been just the ticket at our place.
What You Need to Make Toy Soap
This post contains affiliate/distributor links that support Kids Activities Blog.
- Small toy that will be of interest to your child
- Small piece of plastic wrap
- Glycerin (available at the craft store… I got mine for 50% off using a commonly occurring coupon)
- Soap mold or small plastic reusable snack container, silicone muffin cup, plastic baby food container, plastic container from snack sized yogurt or applesauce etc…
- Colour (Optional): can use liquid food colouring or the stuff specific to soap making
- Essential oils or soap scent.
The most important — and trickiest — part of this process is coming up with a toy that will fit into the container you have chosen to use as a mold, but neat enough to motivate the unwilling hand-washer.
I used some tiny cars and dinosaurs that I found at the dollar store. Once you have chosen your toy the soap can be assembled in 15 minutes and ready to use within the hour!
How to Create Treat Soap
- Wrap toy tightly in a small piece of plastic wrap. It is best to choose a toy that wont be ruined if it gets damp, but the plastic wrap can be used to protect toys that can't sustain being soggy for extended periods or are at risk of being clogged by soap.
- Following the instructions on the glycerin package melt a small amount in the microwave or using a double boiler. (took about 2 min for 1 bar to melt)
- Add essential oils/color if desired.
- Pour glycerin into the mold so it is 1/3 full (or 1/3 the depth of your bar of soap if using a container that is deeper than you want your soap to be)
- Wait 5-10 min until glycerin has begun to set.
- Place toy upside down onto partially set glycerin.
- Pour (re-melted) glycerin on top of toy until it is covered and to the depth you want your bar of soap to be.
- Wait 30-40 min for soap to set and then pop out of mould. You are ready to wash!
Uses for leftover glycerin/soap mix
We had extras, and maybe you will too. Here are some great ideas on ways to use it!
- Making treat soap as gifts for nieces and nephews (think Christmas presents, stocking stuffers, etc)
- Make an adult version with some exfoliating material to use as hostess gifts (think poppy seeds, flower petals, etc)
- Using a mesh "puff," make a shower scrubbie. Compress puff into a cup with string handle sticking out. Pour scented soap around the puff. You now have a colourful soapy scrubby that can hang in your shower. Look for the puffs with decorative tops when using as a gift.
The Essential Oils We Use & Love
We have something special for you. A collection of our favorite essential oils at unbeatable prices. While quantities last, we are featuring our Good Night Deal…
It is a favorite of ours. A 15 ml bottle of Lavender and an Essentials Diffuser – what a great combination for an amazzzzzzing price while supplies last.
The post Treat Soap: Make Hand-Washing Fun! appeared first on Kids Activities Blog.
from Kids Activities Blog http://ift.tt/1pKnfhG
No comments:
Post a Comment