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My family knows that each year I’m good for home-made gifts. I’m not sure if everyone appreciates them, but too freaking bad if they don’t. My daughter and I really enjoy spending time together making crafty Christmas presents for friends and family and its less expensive, more eco-friendly and we really put a lot of love into it. Last year we made soap and cookies, which we cycle through every few years. This year I’d like to make some other bath and beauty products using natural ingredients for our friends and family to use. I really love bath and body products, but unless the budget has a lot of space I often don’t splurge on these types of presents for myself. So, here is the first recipe that I have found for bath salts. I plan to try this out in the next few weeks so that the essential oils really have time to soak into the salts. I’m planning on saving the glass jars that my favorite peaches come in to re-purpose for the packaging. I think doing a multi-layer colored bath salts might be fun too, just to give the clear glass packaging some interest. I’ll take pictures and post once I’ve got a few finished. Essential oils are easily purchased online or at most craft stores fairly inexpensively. Fortunately in Baltimore City there are lots of great shops where I can visit to test before I buy and there are many organic, all-natural options as well. So, get ready to start crafting for the holidays. Here are a few recipes that I found online so you can DIY:
My favorite is actually a link to another blog that shows you how to make lots of homemade bath and body recipes and I’m really looking forward to trying these:
Bath Recipes (Pioneer Thinking)
- Great ideas on creating natural scents including using Dr. Bronner’s soap
and beet juice for coloring.
Bath Salts (from Sherri Osborn on About.com)
- I have some reservations about the mess in my tub that the food coloring might make…I’ll be sure to do a test run before gifting…
Homemade Bath Salts and Decorative Jars (Jane Lake)
- Very thorough with free labels for decorating your jars
General Instructions:
1. Collect your jars, remove labels, then wash and dry thoroughly.
2. For most bath salts recipes you can use your choice of epsom salts or sea salt, with baking soda, if desired, or a combination of all three. One good mix is one cup of epsom salts, with 1/4 cup of sea salt, and two or three tablespoons of baking soda. A little more or less of each ingredient is fine for most bath salts. Epsom salts and sea salt are soothing for tired muscles, while both will gently soften the water for a luxurious bath experience. You could also add a tablespoon or two of finely ground regular oatmeal (not quick cooking) for silky, skin-softening water.
3. Fill each jar to the top with the combination of bath salts that you plan to use. Empty the salts into a mixing jar and add a drop or two of glycerin, if using. Add your choice of essential oil – how many drops you use is a personal preference, but start with two or three drops and see if you like the fragrance. The same goes for the liquid food coloring; sometimes I use quite a few drops of food color to get the strong hue that I like, but so far it hasn’t stained the bath tub or anyone’s skin. Remember that the color and fragrance will be much diluted in the bath water. Stir the salts vigorously until all ingredients are thoroughly combined.
For specific aromatherapy bath salts recipes, and how to decorate each jar, please see the individual instructions that follow:
I used a small canning jar for this project, with a screw top one piece lid. I also used only epsom salts, adding about six drops of mandarin essential oil and about six drops of orange food color. The lid is decorated with 1/2″ orange ribbon, cut in strips to cover the top. Coat the lid with tacky glue and lay the first strip going across the middle of the lid and extending over the rim just a little on both sides. Add ribbon strips on either side, each one overlapping just a little, until the top of the lid is covered. Take another strip and glue it around the lid rim, covering the edges of the top ribbons. Overlap the ends of the lid rim strip and glue down firmly. Cover these ends by making a small bow, then gluing it in place.
Screw the ribbon lid in place securely. Print out our free Mandarin Orange Bath Salts Labels and glue the front label centered beneath the ribbon bow, with the other label being glued to the back of the jar.
I used 1 cup of epsom salts, half a cup of sea salt, and a few tablespoons of baking soda for this recipe, adding 8 drops of lavender. (This one was for me, and I adore lavender – it made the bathroom smell heavenly!) Adjust the fragrance, just adding one or two drops at a time until you’re happy with it. Lavender is a difficult color to achieve with food coloring, I found, but I managed to get a lavender color that I liked by using far more red than blue.
To decorate the jar, thread lavender ribbon through the openings in an ecru doily, tie in place and make a bow. If this isn’t possible, use a rubber band to secure the doily in place, then tie the ribbon over it. Print and cut out our free Lavender Bath Salts Labels then glue in place to finish the jar.
Use only sea salt – either fine or coarse, or a combination of both, for this recipe. Add an essential oil that reminds you of the sea – I used sandlewood. A drop of eucalyptus might enhance this mixture. Jasmine would also work well. Add drops of blue food coloring, if desired, either to all the mixture, or just half, so you can funnel white and blue layers into the jar.
For the nautical rope decoration, take 3 lengths of household twine, each about 3 feet long and braid them together. Coat the jar lid with tacky glue and, in the middle of the lid, start twisting the braid around itself in a spiral, pushing the flat side of the braid firmly into the glue. Go right over the lid edge and around the rim, adding extra glue to secure the end. Make another braid to decorate the bottom of the jar in similar fashion. Take this braid up the jar about an inch or so, then secure the end at the back of the jar.
Print out our Bath Salts from the Sea Gift Jar Labels, coat with glue and stick firmly to the front and back of the bottle. Take a single strand of twine and glue it around the front label. Tie another single strand of twine in a bow around the neck of the bottle.
Patchouli oil has a sensual woodsy aroma, valued for its tranquil calming effect and long-lasting intense fragrance. Add sparingly to epsom salts, sea salt, or a combination of both. Color the bath salts green with food coloring, add glycerin, if using, and bottle.
The rope decoration is simple. Just coat the jar lid with tacky glue and begin to spiral a single strand of household twine around the top and down the sides of the lid. Do the same at the bottom of the jar, bringing the twine up the jar to a depth of about an inch. You can use extra glue on top of the twine if it is necessary to make it secure; the twine absorbs the glue, which then dries clear. Fashion the handle by tying a double strand of twine tightly around the neck of the jar, then twist the strands loosely together, looping them over the lid top, and back to the other side to knot in place. Print our Patchouli Bath Salts Gift Jar Label and glue to front and back of the jar to finish.





























2 Comments
Hi! I found you after searching for bath salt recipes. I love your tips – thanks for sharing. I am also in Baltimore but in the county. Could you share with me where you are able to purchase some of your oils and such? I know of Whole Foods but are there others I can visit?
Thanks!
Oh man, i really like the feather bouquet, but me and my vegetarian ways will not let me have ‘em. But, as a outcome of a Google search for synthetic feathers, here is 1 supply recommended on DeviantArt that I hadn’t believed of: “Pluck a synthetic bird.”
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