
audiobook
by W. H. (William Herbert) Simmons, H. A. Appleton
THE HANDBOOK OF - SOAP MANUFACTURE - BY - W. H. SIMMONS, B.Sc. (Lond.), F.C.S. - AND - H. A. APPLETON
PREFACE
CHAPTER I. - INTRODUCTION.
CHAPTER II. - CONSTITUTION OF OILS AND FATS, AND THEIR SAPONIFICATION.
CHAPTER III. - RAW MATERIALS USED IN SOAP-MAKING.
CHAPTER IV. - BLEACHING AND TREATMENT OF RAW MATERIALS INTENDED FOR SOAP-MAKING.
CHAPTER V. - SOAP-MAKING.
CHAPTER VI. - TREATMENT OF SETTLED SOAP.
CHAPTER VII. - TOILET, TEXTILE AND MISCELLANEOUS SOAPS.
CHAPTER VIII. - SOAP PERFUMES.
A clear‑cut guide to the world of soap making, this handbook blends a concise history of the craft with the latest practices of early‑20th‑century factories. It shows how a humble household product became a cornerstone of British industry, tracing its origins from ancient Gaulish mixtures to the modern, chemically informed processes that dominate today’s production lines.
The text balances scientific detail and practical instruction, assuming only a basic familiarity with chemistry while still serving the needs of seasoned works’ chemists. Readers will find thorough explanations of raw‑material selection, saponification reactions, temperature controls, and the dual measurement systems (Centigrade/Fahrenheit, Baumé/Twaddell) still used on the shop floor. Richly illustrated diagrams walk the listener through each stage of manufacture, making the complex chemistry of fatty acids and metallic bases accessible to anyone curious about how everyday soap is created.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (366K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Ben Beasley, Richard Prairie, Josephine Paolucci and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net. (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Million Book Project.)
Release date
2007-06-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1880–1960
Known for practical early-20th-century books on soap, oils, and fats, this technical writer brought industrial chemistry into clear, useful language. His work was aimed at readers who wanted solid explanations of how everyday manufacturing really worked.
View all booksKnown today for a detailed early 20th-century guide to industrial soapmaking, this little-documented writer helped create a practical reference that still interests makers, historians, and curious readers. The surviving record is sparse, which gives the work itself much of its appeal.
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