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Two Soap Molds, One Combo: Making Flower Bars and Loaf Soap at Home

By System Administrator
July 4, 2026
Two Soap Molds, One Combo: Making Flower Bars and Loaf Soap at Home

The Azlok 6 Round Flower Mold + Wooden Rectangle Silicone Soap Mould Combo Pack lets you make two very different kinds of soap with one purchase: six pretty flower-shaped bars from the silicone mould, and a firm rectangular loaf from the wooden box with its silicone liner that you can slice into bars yourself. It is a good starting kit for anyone who wants both decorative and everyday soap without buying separate moulds.

What you get in the combo

This is a two-piece set priced at ₹989, available as a 1 Pack or 2 Pack. Here is what each mould does:

  • 6-cavity flower mould (approx. 17 × 25 cm, weighs around 105–110 g): a flexible silicone tray with detailed flower patterns for single, ready-shaped bars.
  • Wooden rectangle mould with silicone liner (approx. 27 × 7.5 × 7.5 cm, around 200 g): the wooden box holds the shape while the silicone liner makes demoulding clean. Pour a loaf, let it set, then cut into bars.

Both are made from reusable, heat-resistant silicone and are meant for repeated use. Colour of the silicone may vary depending on stock, so treat it as functional rather than a fixed shade.

What you can make with them

These moulds work for the common home soap-making methods and a few other crafts:

  • Melt-and-pour soap — the easiest route for beginners. Melt a soap base, add colour and fragrance, pour and set.
  • Cold-process and hot-process soap — the wooden loaf mould is especially suited to these, giving you clean bars once cut and cured.
  • Bath bombs and wax melts — the flower cavities give neat, decorative shapes.
  • Candles — the silicone handles wax pouring well; the flower shapes make attractive small pillar or embed candles.

How to use them

For a smooth first batch, keep it simple:

  1. Prep your base. Melt your soap base gently (a microwave in short bursts or a double boiler both work). Do not overheat.
  2. Add colour and fragrance last, once the base is off the heat, so scent does not burn off. Stir slowly to avoid bubbles.
  3. Pour. For the flower mould, fill each cavity evenly. For the loaf, place the silicone liner inside the wooden box first, then pour.
  4. Settle bubbles. A light spritz of isopropyl alcohol on the surface helps pop surface bubbles in melt-and-pour soap.
  5. Let it set. Melt-and-pour firms up in a few hours; cold-process soap needs 24–48 hours in the mould and then weeks of curing.
  6. Demould. Flex the silicone flower cavities gently and the bars release. For the loaf, lift the liner out of the wooden box, then peel it away and slice.

Tips and safety notes

  • Chill the mould in the fridge for 15–20 minutes before demoulding if a bar feels stuck.
  • The wooden box is a support frame, not a waterproof container — always use the silicone liner so raw soap does not touch the wood.
  • Wipe the wooden mould clean and dry; keep it out of standing water to protect it over time.
  • If you are doing cold-process soap, remember it involves lye (sodium hydroxide), which is caustic. Wear gloves and eye protection, work in a ventilated space, and keep children and pets away.
  • Always patch-test finished soap on your skin before regular use, especially if you have added essential or fragrance oils.

Buying and storage

The combo is a sensible pick if you want variety without collecting many moulds. Choose the 2 Pack if you make soap in larger batches or want to pour two loaves at once. After each use, wash the silicone with mild soap and warm water, let it air-dry fully, and store flat away from direct sunlight and sharp objects. Well-kept silicone moulds last for many batches. You can find this combo, along with soap bases, fragrance oils and colours, on Azlok.

FAQ

Can I use these moulds for both melt-and-pour and cold-process soap?

Yes. The silicone flower mould and the lined wooden loaf mould both handle melt-and-pour, cold-process and hot-process soap. The wooden loaf mould is particularly good for cold-process batches you plan to cut into bars.

Are the moulds heat-resistant enough for hot soap and wax?

They are made from heat-resistant silicone suited to warm soap bases and melted wax. Still, avoid direct flame and extreme temperatures, and pour hot liquids carefully.

Why does the silicone colour vary?

The colour depends on current stock and does not affect performance. If a specific colour is unavailable, another colour is supplied so your order is not delayed.

How do I get bars out cleanly?

Let the soap set fully first. Flex the flower cavities to release each bar, and lift the silicone liner out of the wooden box before peeling it away from the loaf. A short spell in the fridge makes stubborn bars come out more easily.

Do I need to grease the moulds?

Usually not — silicone releases soap well on its own. A very light oil coat can help with sticky recipes, but it is rarely necessary for standard melt-and-pour work.

Related Tags

soap moldssoap makingdiy soapsilicone mouldcandle makinghome crafts
Two Soap Molds, One Combo: Making Flower Bars and Loaf Soap at Home - Azlok Blog