A box of honey has been spun and the cappings have been melted into a sunny yellow disc. With the school year looming, I am desperate to spend these last few days enjoying summer projects before the first steps into the school building erase these ten glorious weeks of summer.
Or maybe I am just stalling on getting into school planning.
Lip balm is on the agenda. A new batch of beeswax and a recent delivery of Shea butter, lip balm tubes, and new essential oil fragrances have me raring to go. I ordered my stuff from http://www.soapgoods.com
Two years ago, the last time I did this, I forgot to write down what I did. I’m not making that mistake again.
Here’s what I used:
2 oz. beeswax
4 oz. Shea butter
5 oz. almond carrier oil
5 drops Vitamin E
20 drops essential oil
In a double boiler, melt all the ingredients except the essential oil. Once it is melted, add the essential oil. For this batch I used 8 drops of spearmint and 12 drops of rosemary.
Quickly, before the mixture cools and begins to solidify, use a plastic pipette to fill lip balm tubes. I have a holder that accommodates 50 lip balm tubes. I can’t imagine trying to fill those little tubes without it!

The purple thingy holds 50 lip balm tubes in place. Plastic pipettes enable me to fill them without making a globby mess.
Once the mixture has cooled, put the caps on. Label the tubes before making the next batch!
This first batch filled 50 lip balm tubes with a little left over.
The next batch filled 10 larger tubes. I used 4 drops lemongrass, 12 drops lavender, and 4 drops patchouli. Also a pipette of honey.
A note about fragrance: fragrances are blended according to top notes, middle notes, and base notes. Like a musical chord. Top notes come on strong and evaporate quickly. (Like sopranos.) Middle notes emerge next and last longer. (A shout-out to altos.) Base notes anchor the chord. (Yeah, guys!) There is music and chemistry in blending fragrances.
Fragrance charts are really helpful with this.
The great thing about the lip balm is that it isn’t just for lips. It’s a great treat for tired teacher feet. I bought some larger push up tubes for rolling the stuff on my feet at night. The lavender is a great fragrance for going to sleep but, before adding the fragrance, I poured two tubes unscented so Mr. BeeMan could treat his icky feet without smelling like a girl!
It’s also great on cuticles, rough elbows, and to smooth eyebrows. (Mr. BeeMan doesn’t care about his cuticles, but–hmmm–I could attack his eyebrows.)
After the balm is made, labels are needed. Once upon a time, I spent an inordinate amount of time trying to find labels the right size for the tubes. One can buy cute lip balm labels but they are expensive. I just wanted something I could pick up at Office Depot and print from the computer. A friendly Office Depot worker suggested that I buy 8 x 11″ labels and cut to size. That way I could be a creative as I wanted with the labels. Well, duh, what a great idea.
Of course, my labels are creatively cut into squares.
I spend some computer time tweaking the labels. Then I print, cut, and have a lovely meditative time sticking the labels onto the tubes. That’s when John points out an editing error. You got it…after the labels are on the tubes.

Free tube of lip balm (either size) to the first person to point out the editing error. John doesn’t count–he already got his.
Lastly, shrink-wrap!
There are a few reasons why I put on shrink-wrap.

Tip: hold tube in place with a pencil eraser. The tube won’t blow across the kitchen and you won’t burn your finger.
- It’s fun to watch the hairdryer shrink the wrapper to the tube.
- It keeps the lip balm from gooping up the label, which is just paper.
- I know which tubes are unopened! This is kind of important when gifting.
- It makes the product look official, instead of something I concocted in the kitchen (which I did).
Now that I’ve warmed up to school with the honey harvest-lip balm making activities in math, chemistry, music, art, and writing, I should get to work on my French I planning. Oh no, that is going to involve new technology. A rant will probably be posted soon!
Do you use the same tube on both your lips and feet?
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I use the same recipe for lips and feet. I use a bigger tube for feet and I change the fragrance.
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Thanks for this, I’m going to link to it in my next e-newsletter for my local beeks association.
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Thanks for that! It really is fun and easy to do.
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