How To Create A Diy Bath Bomb At Home?

This DIY recipe for bath bombs is simple and easy to make. The ingredients include baking soda, cornstarch, citric acid, epsom salt, and coloring pigment. To create the bath bombs, gather all the necessary ingredients, combine them, add water or oil, pour in essential oils, and let them dry. Store the bath fizzies in an airtight container and enjoy the colorful, scented bath in no time.

To make these homemade bath bombs, use a hand mixer with a large bowl or stand mixer, measuring cups and spoons, and silicone. Use a hand mixer to whip the coconut oil and combine the ingredients, while measuring cups and spoons are used to measure the ingredients. Silicone can be used to create a printable “You’re the Bomb” gift tag.

The recipe requires 100g bicarbonate of soda, 50g citric acid, 25g cornflour, 25g Epsom salt (optional), 2 tbsp oil (such as sunflower, coconut, or olive oil), ¼ tsp essential oil (such as orange, lavender, or chamomile), a few drops of liquid food coloring, and optionally, orange peel, lavender, or rose petals to decorate.

A fool-proof tutorial for making homemade bath bombs includes tips and tricks to prevent them from crumbling or cracking. The ingredients include 1 cup baking soda, ½ cup citric acid, ½ cup cornstarch, ¼ cup epsom salt, ¼ cup coconut oil melted, 1/2 cup citric acid, and ¼ cup epsom salt.

In summary, this DIY bath bomb recipe is easy to make and provides a fun and creative way to create bath bombs at home.


📹 How To Make Bath Bombs | DIY Bath Bomb Recipe

If you would like to learn how to make your own Bath Bombs then follow this simple DIY project for bath bombs tutorial. They are …


What are the ingredients for a bath bomb?

This bath bomb recipe involves using 100g bicarbonate of soda, 50g citric acid, 25g cornflour, 25g Epsom salt, 2 tbsp oil, ¼ tsp essential oil, a few drops of liquid food coloring, and orange peel, lavender, or rose petals to decorate. It’s a fun indoor activity for kids and a lovely gift for friends and family. The ingredients are safe for use in the bath, but they are inedible. The recipe can be easily adapted to your home and is recommended for children aged eight years or over.

How long do DIY bath bombs last?
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How long do DIY bath bombs last?

Bath bombs can last for at least six months if stored properly. They should stay fresh for six months after making them, and if purchased from the store, it’s best to use them within six months. A use-by date is helpful for businesses to inform customers about the best time to use the product, preventing negative reviews. Bath bombs and bath salts don’t spoil, but they can lose their effectiveness over time. Baking soda in bath bombs can lose its ability to create fizzing bubbles, and citric acid can lose its potency.

Including a use-by date in the product can help maintain customer satisfaction and protect the brand’s reputation. In summary, bath bombs are a versatile and effective product that can last for up to six months if stored properly.

Are homemade bath bombs good for you?

Bath bombs, popular among both adults and kids, are colorful, fizzy, and fragrant bath bombs that transform ordinary baths into tranquil spas or frothy works of art. These hard-packed mixtures of fragrances, dyes, and other substances effervesce when dropped in water and can cause irritation to sensitive skin, causing redness, itching, or rash. The ingredients may also affect a woman’s vaginal pH balance, resulting in changes in normal bacteria levels that can cause irritation or even infections. Most bath bombs contain a combination of baking soda and citric acid, which neutralize each other when mixed with water. However, other ingredients may be irritating or potentially harmful.

What are the main bath bomb ingredients?

This bath bomb recipe involves using 100g bicarbonate of soda, 50g citric acid, 25g cornflour, 25g Epsom salt, 2 tbsp oil, ¼ tsp essential oil, a few drops of liquid food coloring, and orange peel, lavender, or rose petals to decorate. It’s a fun indoor activity for kids and a lovely gift for friends and family. The ingredients are safe for use in the bath, but they are inedible. The recipe can be easily adapted to your home and is recommended for children aged eight years or over.

How do you make a liquid bath bomb?

This recipe for fizzy bath drops involves 300g of sodium bicarbonate, 130g of citric acid, a optional colorant, 30g of carrier oil (such as fractionated coconut oil and sweet almond oil), and 30 drops of essential oils. The fizzy bath bombs are easy to make and can be used as party favors or Christmas or birthday hampers. The recipe makes 460g (approximately 15 small or 5 large) and requires a minimum of 30g of sodium bicarbonate, 130g of citric acid, a optional colorant, 30g of carrier oil, and 30 drops of essential oils.

What is the best liquid for bath bombs?

Liquid Crystal Dyes are ideal for bath bombs due to their high concentration and minimal reaction risk. Polysorbate 80 helps prevent staining by mixing colors with bathwater. Natural colorants like clays and colored salts like pink or grey salt can add subtle color. Salt baths have been traditionally believed to be beneficial for skin and soothing aches and pains. Sea salts, which contain trace minerals from the water, can sometimes make the salt different colors. These options can help create a unique and relaxing bath experience. Overall, using liquid colorants, natural colorants, and salts can create a unique and relaxing experience for your bath bombs.

Do bath bombs hydrate your skin?

Bath bombs are similar to adding bath oil or salt to water, providing moisturizing benefits. However, some ingredients can be irritating, such as fragrances and dyes, and may cause glitter to appear in inappropriate places. For sensitive skin, it is recommended to avoid bath bombs altogether. Common irritants in bath soaks include limonene, linalool, and alpha-isomethyl ionone. Bath bombs are more about the sensory experience than function, and should be avoided unless concerns about irritants or a neat freak.

Why do bath bombs go bad?
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Why do bath bombs go bad?

Bath bombs can expire due to various factors, including discolouration, mould growth, bad odors, and lack of fizz. Discolouration indicates that the product has a shorter shelf life, while mould growth indicates that the product has expired. Natural ingredients like butter, milk, and oatmeal are more likely to go mouldy when left unused, and bath bombs can also be exposed to water, oxygen, or mould spores. Bad odors may be emitted by the chemical ingredients used to make the bath bomb, and a fragrance that changes from the original essential oils may also indicate expiration.

Flizz is caused by the decreased effectiveness of citric acid and baking soda, which are the main ingredients that cause bath bombs to fizzle. If a bath bomb has little to no fizz when tested in the sink, it should be avoided. To extend the shelf life of a bath bomb, consider the storage conditions and follow these tips:

  1. Clean the bath bomb thoroughly before use.
  2. Use a clean, dry cloth to remove any loose debris.
  3. Store the bath bomb in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight.
  4. Avoid using the bath bomb if it has little to no fizz.

What binds bath bombs together?

Bath bombs are made with baking soda and citric acid, which cause a fizzing reaction when dropped in water. Witch hazel is needed to hold the mixture together and can be customized with colors, fragrances, and additives. If the bath bomb is crumbly or cracking, it’s likely too dry. To prevent this, use less witch hazel or use witch hazel instead of water. Water is not recommended as it makes bath bombs fizz too early. Find bath bomb making supplies here.

What makes a bath bomb explode?
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What makes a bath bomb explode?

Bath bombs create fizzy bubbles filled with carbon dioxide gas due to a chemical reaction between ingredients. DIY bath bombs can be made to your desired size and proportions by mixing baking soda, Epsom salt, citric acid, and cornstarch in a large bowl. In a separate bowl, mix olive oil, water, essential oil, and food coloring. Food coloring can get in hair, so use shower caps or avoid darker colors. These DIY bath bombs make skin feel soft and can be used as a treat.


📹 How to Make Bath Bombs | Bath Bomb Recipe

Create a spa-like experience at home as you learn how to make a bath bomb with our easy to follow tutorial. Our bath bomb …


How To Create A DIY Bath Bomb At Home
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Rafaela Priori Gutler

Hi, I’m Rafaela Priori Gutler, a passionate interior designer and DIY enthusiast. I love transforming spaces into beautiful, functional havens through creative decor and practical advice. Whether it’s a small DIY project or a full home makeover, I’m here to share my tips, tricks, and inspiration to help you design the space of your dreams. Let’s make your home as unique as you are!

Email: [email protected], [email protected]

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15 comments

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  • My daughters have been interested in making these for a while so today we have made them using your instructions & tutorial. I managed to source the citric acid from an independent health food shop (was in the wine making section?!) and we used bicarbonate of soda. I had some rose essence left over from cake making. I used olive oil, but next time I will use almond oil as it isn’t as strong smelling. We didn’t have moulds so we used a silicone cupcake mould. Patted them down firmly and turned them out like sandcastles on some baking paper on a tray, to dry out. They look great & smell lovely. We are already discussing future designs & fragrances. Thank you for the tutorial. It has provided some entertainment on a wet afternoon in England!

  • I made these today with my daughter. It worked perfectly. We added orange zest and rose petals and it amped up the scents. This recipe made lovely bath bombs, and adding the water into the oil and food coloring mixture did not make the dry ingredients react before making the molds. It worked perfectly. I’ll be adjusting the added scents with other dried flowers in the future. Thank you for sharing your article.

  • I made these today ( after a long and interesting search for citric acid) and I have to say, I love them! I didn’t have much food colouring, so I used a red soap colouring, which worked just as well. I didn’t use as much, because I wanted a lighter colour. It worked really well, the colour was a light marshmallow-pink. Awesome. I can’t buy essential oils easily where I live (and shipping is a no-no) so I just used soap flavouring I found in my cupboards, in vanilla. The smell was just as amazing! I was super happy! I used almond oil instead of olive oil, as I find it a bit more moisturising and I didn’t have the oilyness from the essential oils. I found that the mixture was a bit dry though, so I added one or two more teaspoons of almond oil and it was perfect. I also couldn’t find a mould anywhere in any of the shops and as I said, shipping was too complicated for where I lived so i tried using silicone cupcake moulds. Well, lets just say those FAILED EPICLY. LOL. I dug around in my cupboards and found a smallish bowl and an eggcup. I followed your instructions on removing the mould and they worked perfectly. The mixture was enough for 10 large bombs and 2 smaller ones. Nearer to the end, I started playing around with them by adding sprinkles into the bottom of the mould and into the mixture. They were even more beautiful than the others! Success! I am now looking forward to a future of vanilla-cupcake-marshmallow baths. Thank you so much for your awesome tutorial, it was so helpful.

  • My first attempts are still not fully dry and as I feared they have flattened out, changing from a ball shake to a ‘bun’ shape. The only thing I can think that I may be doing wrong is in the amount of food colouring. I’ve added 1/2oz tub (I think that’s approx 14.1g). Can you suggest a remedy? Do I cut down on the amount of food colour (and thereby lessen depth of colour) or could I lessen possibly, the amount of olive oil or water?

  • Thank you SO much for making this article! I just found out about bath bombs today on Youtube and as a bath lover, I looked them up and was saddened when I saw they are around $7 for ONE ball! As a college student, I don’t have money for that! This is relatively inexpensive and I cannot wait to make tons of these for myself and hopefully as gifts for friends and family 🙂

  • I made these the other day and used only a few drops of essential oils, lime, grapefruit and lemon, some green food coloring, and witch hazel instead of water. I shaped them in easter eggs seeing as it was so close to easter, but they ended up setting off the chemical reaction and the plastic egg halves popped off by the next day (I left them on the bath bombs instead of taking them off right away). Can you advise what I did wrong, maybe I needed more oil? Also I used a spray bottle to mist the mixture instead of just pouring my mixture in. Looks like yours started to fix upon initially adding it to the mixture, what made the fizzing reaction stop?

  • I made a bath bomb for the first time using a recipe I found. It was 1 cup baking soda, 1 cup epsom salt, 1/2 cup corn starch; food coloring (for color), 3/4 tbsp water, 1 tbsp coconut oil, and 1/2 cup lemon juice. I didn’t add epsom salt (forgot to) and not enough lemon juice (for liquid). Mine fell apart. How do I measure out enough ingredients so that it doesn’t happen again or where did I go wrong, where the fell apart after they dried and taken out of the mold?

  • HELP!!!! ive been making bath bombs for about 3-4 days now. for some reason, theyre EXPANDING!!! the recipe ive been using is: 1 cup baking soda 1/2 cup epson salts 1/2 cup citric acid 1 tsp water 2 tsp essential oils 3 tsp olive oil i dont understand what im doing wrong. can u help me PLEASE!!!! ive had some people say it could be the hummidity in the house but its fairly cold in here since its been so warm all summer. eagerly waiting for a reply.

  • Hi i.want to make these but your recipe states 1tsp water and 3tsp oil plus 2tsp essential oil. Thats a ratio of 1 part water to 5 parts oil, but in your article it looks like you have more or equal amounts of each if not a little more water. Why is this ? Has anyone tried these following the recipe and had any success ?

  • hello! I love your recIpe for bath bombs. I find very usefull that you used grams instead of cups, becouse in my country we don’t use cups for measuring and it’s difficult for me to convert everything.(i am a littlebit lazy for doing converting :D) I used combination of lavender, bergamot and ylang ylan esential oils and it smells awesome!! i even added some dry lavender petals. I also used fine sea salt instead of Epsom salt. I add even more oil and water becouse bombs were breaking all the time. So that way i succeeded. YOUR RECIPE IS TOTALLY AWESOME I LOVE IT AND IS SO SIMPLE. I AM REALY GRATEFULL THAT YOU POSTED THIS article! I WATCH SO MANY OF THEM TRYING TO FIND THE SIMPLEST ONE AND THIS ONE WORKED FOR ME JUST FINE… NO, NOT JUST FINE IT WORKED AWESOOOOOME 😀 THANK YOU AGAIN JJ

  • I’m going to scent them like fruitloops and put a plastic dinosaur in the middle for my brother. Our parents struggle to get him to take a bath. I’ve found some little dinosaur bathbombs at walmart he likes. He’ll gladly take a bath for them. The dinosaurs though are super tiny and only one color. The packaging even says which of only three dinosaurs you’ll get. Lame. I can literally get a better one from a quarter machine. So I found an ebay listing for way cooler dinosaurs. I think I’ll try using a plastic easter egg as a mould for extra fun.

  • I need help! I already bought all my materials and ingredients! Doing it for Christmas 2017 and when I attempt making it, next day, it expanded and oil leaked thru my paper bag ( I plan on putting them in paper gift bags)…so why did it do so? The ones from Lush stays put and dry. Mine was super moist and oily

  • Questions on the conversion for the Americans (sorry, I know..this is annoying as shit). I checked conversions (I’ve never had to do this for a recipe before and I want to get it right) and there are 2 kinds: wet and dry goods. For example, in your recipe the baking soda is listed as 225g, which is general wet ingredients conversion for 1 american cup. Dry ingredients conversion for the same amount of baking soda (1 american cup) is 256g..quite the difference. Logic dictates that you’d do dry conversion for this, since it’s dry goods, but you have the wet conversion listed. I could have this all wrong and may have used an inaccurate conversion site or read it/understood it wrong. I could be wrong and just need to measure it simply by weight, but again I have no idea. I have no experience in this so I can’t be like “Yep! This seems totally right.” I’d love to use this recipe, it seems excellent, but I don’t want to mess up the mixture and waste ingredients. Help please?

  • I realize this is an old article but I’m hoping someone can answer. I’ve been waiting for mica colouring from Amazon but it’s delayed due to prioritizing deliveries during Covid. If I use regular food colouring ( I have a ton of the Wilton pastes for cakes), will that stain the bath tub? Does anyone have any suggestions or comments?

  • Hi I’ve tried this a couple of times and the each time I’ve mixed and packed into the molds, they are perfect round shape but then somehow through the night the ball expands and loses its shape and becomes this flat blob of a bath bomb. What do you think could be causing that? I set it in a cool room on the table and the vent reaches it to dry quicker

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