Guest guest Posted January 9, 2011 Report Share Posted January 9, 2011 > I finally got around to tincturing the Goat hair that was so thoughtfully sent to me. I mixed it with the alcohol (around 3%) tonight. So far the alcohol has taken a very swampy, dirty water look. Not sure how long to macerate it for but I'll see where it's at in about 2 weeks. > > Hi Do you mean you put about 3% of goat hair by weight in 97% of alcohol by weight? That seems very light. Anyway, yes, it will have a swampy, dirty water look. Shake the jar every day for two or three weeks. Then let it settle about a week, and you can pour or pipette the clear tincture off the top. I let the hair and alcohol remain in the same jar, occasionally adding more hair and alcohol. It's just the Simplers Method, but it works well for this. Anya McCoy http://AnyasGarden.com http://PerfumeClasses.com http://NaturalPerfumers.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 9, 2011 Report Share Posted January 9, 2011 > Do you mean you put about 3% of goat hair by weight in 97% of > alcohol by weight? That seems very light. Hi Anya! I measured the weight of the hair (about 8 grams) and added about 258 grams of alcohol which makes is about a 3% tincture. I figured if it's too light I can always filter and add new hair again. I was originally going to make it 20% but once all the hair started expanding it felt like it was too little alcohol. I'm wondering if I can upload a photo of the jar with the hair in it to see what you all think. Is that possible? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2011 Report Share Posted January 10, 2011 >I measured the weight of the hair (about 8 grams) and added about 258 grams of alcohol which makes is about a 3% tincture. I figured if it's too light I can always filter and add new hair again. I was originally going to make it 20% but once all the hair started expanding it felt like it was too little alcohol. I'm wondering if I can upload a photo of the jar with the hair in it to see what you all think. Is that possible? Hi, First, the 3% tincture you made by weighing 8g of the hair in 256g alcohol doesn't really give a 3% solution. For a 3% tincture with 8g, you should add exactly 232g of alcohol. As for the reduction in volume of the alcohol in the tincture (the expanded B.hair) which is to be expected, I suggest you make a lower strength tincture; say 1%(1g in 100g alcohol). This would give a low strength tincture but the concentration or strength can be improved when you incorporate another B.hair(1g) in the tincture extract. This can be repeated until the desired strength is attained. Let us know how this helps Regards, Oloruntoba femi Lagos, Nigeria Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2011 Report Share Posted January 10, 2011 Please forgive my ignorance but I have a few questions about this. 1. What is the hopes of such a process? 2. Is the goal to actually dissolve the actual hair? Or extract some excretion that happens to have been absorbed by the hair?3. Does the hair have to come from a specific part of the billy goat? If the process will not actually dissolve the hair itself, then the actual weight of the hair is immaterial to the tincture. For sake of argument let's say one tosses 10g of bg hair into 99g of ETOH. If after a while you filter out the bg hair and you now have a solution of 100 g then you essentially have 1 g of whatever it is you are intending to tincture. Leaving something more like a 1% tincture. This is not intended to be spoken in expertise, but actually a question in the form of a statement of understanding. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2011 Report Share Posted January 10, 2011 If the process will not actually dissolve the hair itself, then the actual weight of the hair is immaterial to the tincture. For sake of argument let's say one tosses 10g of bg hair into 99g of ETOH. If after a while you filter out the bg hair and you now have a solution of 100 g then you essentially have 1 g of whatever it is you are intending to tincture. Leaving something more like a 1% tincture. Hi Bradley, This is actually an excellent question as I was wondering the same thing. This is my first time tincturing so any insight and help would be wonderful. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2011 Report Share Posted January 11, 2011 > > Please forgive my ignorance but I have a few questions about this. > 1. What is the hopes of such a process? 2. Is the goal to actually dissolve the actual hair? Or extract some excretion that happens to have been absorbed by the hair?3. Does the hair have to come from a specific part of the billy goat? > If the process will not actually dissolve the hair itself, then the actual weight of the hair is immaterial to the tincture. For sake of argument let's say one tosses 10g of bg hair into 99g of ETOH. If after a while you filter out the bg hair and you now have a solution of 100 g then you essentially have 1 g of whatever it is you are intending to tincture. Leaving something more like a 1% tincture. > This is not intended to be spoken in expertise, but actually a question in the form of a statement of understanding. > Hi Bradley: Before we all get our goat hair in a knot due to all the weights and measures ;-) let's all take a deep breath. Not too deep of the goat hair, mind you, that'll give you a nose full of funk that you'll find hard to forget! Since I'm the first person to use goat hair tincture in a perfume, I speak from experience. Just plop the hair in a glass jar, cover with alcohol, cover with a tight lid, let steep. That's it. The schmutzy cloudy murk will clear over time. Shake the jar occasionally. Maybe add a tad more alcohol if the mix seems too strong. That's all. No hair will dissolve. So what if the hair absorbs some alcohol? Clip hair from the head of a rutting billy goat in the Fall for a goat cheese/musk scent, from the rear end of the goat for a more musky scent. To avoid the goat kicking, perhaps just wipe the hindquarters with a cotton rag soaked in alcohol, with a small buck of alcohol held below the business. Don't filter out the hair. Relax, this isn't rocket science, or anything like it :-P Anya McCoy http://AnyasGarden.com http://PerfumeClasses.com http://NaturalPerfumers.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2011 Report Share Posted January 11, 2011 ________________________________ To: NaturalPerfumery Sent: Tue, January 11, 2011 10:32:32 AM Subject: Re: Goat Tincture started  First, the 3% tincture you made by weighing 8g of the hair in 256g alcohol doesn't really give a 3% solution. For a 3% tincture with 8g, you should add exactly 232g of alcohol. Incorrect. To find the correct ratio you have to do some simple math: 3/100=8/x x=8x100/3 x=266.66~267 (266.66 rounded up to 267) The original post is correct! Maggie Hi all, Can you stand one more math opinion? 8 g /3% = 267 g (267 grams is 100% or the total weight) 267g - 8g = 259g alcohol Proof 267g * 3% = 8g Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2011 Report Share Posted January 11, 2011 Hi all, > Can you stand one more math opinion? > 8 g /3% = 267 g (267 grams is 100% or the total weight) > 267g - 8g = 259g alcohol > Proof > 267g * 3% = 8g > Jane Great! Thanks for all the help. I guess I did do it right to begin with. So my Goat tincture is at 3% while my Vanilla Bean tincture is 12.5%. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 12, 2011 Report Share Posted January 12, 2011 to me this math seems correct, but may I ask why would this be considered a 3 percent tincture weight/weight, if only a small portion of what is on the goat hair actually dissolves? i have never worked with goat hair, how much oil, or material is in the hair that goes into solution? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 12, 2011 Report Share Posted January 12, 2011 ________________________________ To: NaturalPerfumery Sent: Wed, January 12, 2011 9:24:17 AM Subject: Re: Goat Tincture started  to me this math seems correct, but may I ask why would this be considered a 3 percent tincture weight/weight, if only a small portion of what is on the goat hair actually dissolves? i have never worked with goat hair, how much oil, or material is in the hair that goes into solution? Good point Luigi. In this case estimating a 3% tincture is as close as you are going to get. The amount of secretions on/in the hair is an unknown. To measure the exact tincture may require one to be in the area of rocket science .....lol Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 12, 2011 Report Share Posted January 12, 2011 Unless you remove the hair and weigh the results you will not be able to know how much material was dissolved into the alcohol. I am pretty certain that as a tincture, it would be hard to actually give it a true (accurate) percentage. However, if you are doing this, and you do it the same way each time, with the same amount of hair, from the same part of the goat, in the same amount of alcohol, for the same period of time, you should have a reasonably consistent result. If you use that by ear (or nose, as it were ) your adjustments will be determined by your results. The problem with any natural product is always that nature does whatever it wants to. Depending on the season, the diet of the animal, the amount of rain, and so many other factors, any plant or animal material from batch to batch will invariably be just a bit different from the last. This is not to denigrate Natural Perfumery, but to clarify that slight variations, like the imperfections in wood grain in a piece of furniture, add character. Perhaps even depth or some other spiritual quality. Those nuances are one of the things I see that tend to polarize certain people on one side of the other about natural vs 'those other methods.' --------------------------- Strive for excellence, not perfection. -- B Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 12, 2011 Report Share Posted January 12, 2011 > Good point Luigi. In this case estimating a 3% tincture is as close as you are > going to get. The amount of secretions on/in the hair is an unknown. To > measure the exact tincture may require one to be in the area of rocket science > ....lol > Jane > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 12, 2011 Report Share Posted January 12, 2011 However, if you are doing this, and you do it the same way each time, with the same amount of hair, from the same part of the goat, in the same amount of alcohol, for the same period of time, you should have a reasonably consistent result. This is correct. When I set forth creating this tincture I was actually measuring 3% based on material to alcohol. I consider it a 3% tincture because I used 3% of the raw material to alcohol. I really don't know how much extract will actually be in the alcohol after filtering. The same goes for the vanilla and any other sold material that doesn't actually dissolve in the alcohol. If the strength of the " 3% " tincture is what I was looking for then that is the measurement that goes into my book. Each time I make the tincture I will use 3% raw material to 97% alcohol to achieve a similar, if not exact, tincture. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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