Tuesday, January 15, 2013

where to find vegetable glycerin

Vegetable glycerin. Vegetable glycerin or most popularly known as VG works by adding more vapour when vaporizing. Most users actually add distilled water to their VG solution to make it thinner because this anti-freezing base is a thick substance. It is actually mixed up with e-juice as well to give stronger hit.Glycerol is extracted from animal fats or (preferably) vegetable oils through the rendering process which involves the use of lye. Most manufacturers of mass-produced commercial soaps remove the glycerol. However, in most homemade and artisan-crafted soaps (such as you might purchase at a local farmer's market), glycerin is a primary ingredient.This all-natural product is made in several places around the country, including Hawaii. There, soaps are made with healthful tropical oils such as coconut and palm, and include many exotic scents derived from local fruits (mango, passionfruit and pineapple) as well as flowers (local orchids and jasmine). Although not generally available outside the U.S., this product is still able to be shipped to the other 49 states as well as the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, American Samoa and Guam.Liquid glycerin is most prominently used in cosmetics and also in body care products for adding moisture to the skin and providing oxygen. It has a cooling,hydrating effect on the skin and hence is an important ingredient of soap and skin care products. You can buy a chunk of solid glycerin from the drug store, heat it into liquid form and then put it in a soap mould to get glycerin soap for moisturizing and cleaning your body. Apart from providing moisturizer, glycerin also heals the wounds very quickly and hence is used for cuts and wounds. It forcefully extracts the water from the thriving bacterial cells around the injury and fastens the recovery. It is best used with jojoba oil as a moisturizer especially in winter season when you suffer from chapped lips and tightening of skin.The process of removing the glycerol from the soap is fairly complicated (and of course, there are a lot of variations on the theme). In the most simplest terms: you make soap out of fats and lye. The fats already contain glycerin as part of their chemical makeup (both animal and vegetable fats contain from 7% - 13% glycerine). When the fats and lye interact, soap is formed, and the glycerol is left out as a "byproduct". But, while it's chemically separate, it's still blended into the soap mix.

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