Moules à savon pour savons artisanaux

Donnez vie à vos rêves de savon les plus fous avec notre moule à savon haut de gamme. Toute personne souhaitant fabriquer ses propres savons artisanaux uniques peut utiliser le moule à savon PJ Bold , quel que soit son niveau de compétence.

Commencez à fabriquer dès maintenant en choisissant une forme parmi notre assortiment. C'est le moment de fabriquer un savon qui se démarque : cliquez, choisissez et commandez votre moule à savon idéal !

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Our Customers Speak: 1 Million Molds, Millions of Reasons to Choose Us

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What Makes Our Silicone Soap Molds Different?

Clean Release, No Tearing

The silicone flexes enough to peel off a cured soap bar without cutting or prying. Fine design details hold their shape because you don't have to force the bar out. Every bar comes out looking like it should.

Handles Cold Process and Melt-and-Pour

Cold process soap gets hot mid-reaction. Melt-and-pour hits around 120°F. Hot process runs higher. Our silicone takes all three without warping. It's safe from freezer temperatures up to 400°F (204°C), which covers every common soap-making method. For more on silicone safety in the oven, see our guide on whether silicone can go in the oven.

Food-Safe Silicone

The silicone is FDA-compliant and BPA-free, meeting FDA 21 CFR 177.2600, the federal rule for rubber articles in repeated food contact. That matters if you're making soap for gift sets that share shelves with kitchen bars, or if you want one mold that works for both soap and food projects.

Dishwasher Safe

Rinse, toss in the dishwasher, done. Lye residue from cold process soap comes off cleanly without soaking. For hand washing, warm water and mild dish soap also work. Avoid rough scrubbers since they scratch the design surface over time.

How to Buy the Right Silicone Soap Mold

1

Match the Mold to Your Soap Method

Melt-and-pour soap sets fast, so shallow, detailed molds like the marijuana leaf mold green work well. Cold process needs 24 to 48 hours to cure, so deeper molds hold up better under that longer set time. Pick the mold type based on your workflow.

Think About Bar Size

Small guest soaps sit well in thin, small-cavity trays. Standard bath bars need more depth. For standard-size square bars, our 192-cavity half-sheet mold works for batching. Or for thicker bars, a 160-cavity half-sheet gives more room per piece.

2
3

Pick a Design Your Customers Will Recognize

If you sell at markets or gift shops, the design does half the marketing for you. A heart silicone mold works for Valentine's or wedding gift soaps. A leaf or botanical design works year-round. Pick something that matches how you want your brand to look on the shelf.

Check for Versatility

A good soap mold does more than soap. Our foil cupcake liners with a green leaf design work for soap, candle, and baking projects. A mushroom chocolate bar silicone mold handles soap bars the same way it handles chocolate. One purchase, multiple crafts.

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Tips for Using Your Silicone Soap Molds

  • 1

    Wash Before First Use

    New silicone can have factory residue. Wash with warm soapy water and dry fully before your first pour. Skipping this step can leave specks in your first batch.

  • 2

    Pour Slowly to Avoid Air Bubbles

    Pour your soap base in a steady, slow stream instead of dumping it. A fast pour traps air in the design grooves and leaves small holes on the finished bar. A slow pour lets the liquid settle into every detail.

  • 3

    Tap the Mold After Pouring

    Give the tray two or three firm taps on the counter right after filling. Trapped bubbles rise to the surface before the soap sets. Skipping this step shows up later as pits in the design face.

  • 4

    Let Soap Fully Set Before Unmolding

    Cold process soap needs 24 to 48 hours minimum before you touch it. Melt-and-pour sets in 1 to 2 hours. Pulling a bar too early tears the edges and loses the design. When in doubt, leave it another few hours.

  • 5

    Release With Gentle Flex

    Push up gently from the bottom of each cavity. Peel the silicone back slowly. If a bar resists, chill the whole mold for 10 minutes in the fridge, then try again. For mold use details across different projects, our guide how to make wax melts in silicone molds covers the same technique with photos.

How to Care for Your Silicone Soap Molds

  • Rinse the mold with warm water right after unmolding so soap residue doesn't dry in the design
  • Wash with mild dish soap by hand, or put on the top rack of the dishwasher
  • Avoid rough scrubbers, wire pads, or sharp tools that scratch the surface and dull fine details
  • Air-dry fully before stacking or storing so moisture doesn't collect in the cavity grooves
  • Store flat or loosely rolled, away from direct sunlight and heat
  • Don't fold or crease silicone molds since creasing weakens the material permanently

FAQs

Yes. Silicone handles the heat from lye-based saponification without warping or leaching. The flexibility also makes unmolding easier after the 24 to 48 hour cure. That's why many cold process soapers prefer silicone over wood or plastic molds.

Yes. The silicone meets FDA 21 CFR 177.2600, the rule that covers rubber articles in repeated food contact. That said, if you've used a mold for soap with strong lye or fragrance, keep it for soap only. Silicone can absorb strong scents over time.

Years, if treated well. Hundreds of uses is realistic for a single mold. How long yours lasts depends on how often you use it, whether you use strong lye recipes, and how carefully you clean it. High-quality silicone handled gently lasts a long time.

Soak the mold in warm water with a tablespoon of dish soap for 15 minutes, then rinse. For stubborn residue, a soft silicone or nylon brush clears the design grooves without scratching. Don't use metal tools since they cut the silicone.

Yes, silicone handles both. Wax doesn't react with silicone, and the mold releases hardened wax just as cleanly as soap. If you want a deeper guide on wax specifically, read our complete guide to candle molds.

Yes, but strong scents can linger in silicone over many uses. If you make heavily fragranced soap, keep one mold for fragrance-heavy batches and another for lightly scented or unscented work. That way scents don't transfer between batches.