DIY Geode Bath Bomb Recipe + Tutorial (2024)

Robyn and I are declaring this week Geode Week on the blog and in our bath bomb Facebook group, Bath Fizz and Foam. We’re going to share FOUR different geode bath bomb projects and one bubble bar geode project.

As we move through the week, we’re going to share some different molds and advanced techniques. To get us started, I’m going to start with the simplest way I found to make geodes. You only need a round bath bomb mold…nothing fancy. Let’s dive in!

The recipe I used is my basic bath bombs recipe with added SLSa to give it some foam in the tub! You can omit the SLSa or substitute with milk powder, which creates a bit of foam in the tub.

If you are new to making bath bombs I HIGHLY recommend my book Fun in the Tub or Bubble Bootcamp to learn about formulating so you can tweak any recipe to suite your environment. There is no single and perfect bath bombs recipe! You’ll need to formulate for your humidity and environment.

The bath bomb recipe below makes 4 geode bath bombs (depending on your mold)! Once you give it a try, you can scale it up to make bigger batches.

I used a stainless steel bath bomb mold from Bramble Berry.

  • Stainless Steel
  • Dimensions (in inches): Each half: 2.75″ diam x 1.5″ H
  • Capacity: 7.5 oz.

This project is created in four phases:

  • Making the colored salt
  • Making the bath bombs
  • Gluing on the colored salt
  • Painting the bath bomb

Making the Colored Salt

When it comes to coloring salt, you can basically use any kind. My favorite kind of salt to use is Epsom salt. You can use sea salt, dead sea salt or, as Robyn does, rock salt. You can use fine through large grain (size) depending on the look you’re going for. My Epsom salt is pretty large in grain size. You can use a finer salt for a druzy style of crystals.

Coloring salt is super simple! You simply wet your salt with alcohol, mix in some mica and then spread it to dry. I like to combine alcohol and polysorbate 80 to wet my salt. The polysorbate helps to emulsify the colorants into the tub (by actually emulsifying the oils into the tub).

Combine salt, alcohol and polysorbate into a cup and mix. Add mica until you get the color that you want. I used about 2 tablespoon of salt, 1/2 teaspoon of alcohol, a few drops of poly80 and then a microscoop of mica. If your color doesn’t appear to be mixing in, add more alcohol to help disperse it.

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I colored my salt 3 shades of purple mica from Nurture. A dark purple (Purple Vibrance + Blackberry), medium purple (Mardi Gras) and then a really light purple (touch of Iris Purple). I was going for an amethyst geode look and if you Google images, they are usually dark purple in the middle and then spread out to white.

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You want your colored salt to be dry before use. So, spread it out onto plates to dry.

Now, let’s make the bath bombs!

Simple Geode Bath Bomb Recipe

Ingredients

  • Baking Soda – 1 cup (250 grams)
  • Citric Acid – ½ cup (100 grams)
  • Cream of Tartar – 1 tablespoon (12 grams)
  • Kaolin Clay – 1 tablespoon (3 grams)
  • Corn Starch, Tapioca Starch or Arrowroot Powder – 1 tablespoon (10 grams)
  • Fine Sodium Lauryl Sulfoacetate (SLSA) – 1/8 cup (20 grams)
  • Avocado Oil – 1 teaspoon (5 grams)
  • Polysorbate 80 – 1 teaspoon (5 grams)
  • Scent – 7 grams
  • Color – Dye, Lake or Mica
  • Fine-mist spray bottle with 50/50 water/alcohol

Step 1: Measure or weigh all the dry ingredients into your mixing bowl (sift for best results). In another container (a small measuring cup works well), measure or weigh all the wet ingredients and mix them together. If you’re using a butter in place of the avocado oil, be sure to melt it first.

Step 2: Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and immediately start to mix. DIY Geode Bath Bomb Recipe + Tutorial (3)

Step 3: Blend the mixture using a hand mixer or a stand mixer.

Mix for about a minute. This helps to break up clumps and aerate the mixture. You can also break up any clumps using your hands if needed.

Step 4: Add your coloring and mix using a hand mixer to disperse. I used a blend of Yellow 5 Lake and Red 40 Dye.

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Step 5: Wet your mixture using a fine-mist spray bottle of binder until you get to the correct consistency.

The mixture feels like lightly damp sand, not like wet sand, which would be too much moisture. Holding together and not crumbling.

I like to test mine by tapping it with my thumb. It should stay together and not break apart easily. Some makers hold the clump of mixture in the air (maybe 10-12 inches) and drop it into the bowl. If it stays together, it’s ready.

For more tips, be sure to read through our basic bath bomb recipe tutorial.

Step 6: Mold your bath bombs. I packed one side of the round mold and then pressed the other into it to create the indented area to fill with salt for the geode design.

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If your bath bomb crumbles or breaks during unmolding, simply mix back into the batch and start over with molding.

Allow your bath bombs a day or two to dry before you decorate as geodes!

Making the Cocoa Butter Drizzle

To adhere the salts to the bath bomb, I like to make a cocoa butter drizzle. You can do this a few ways.

I have a recipe in my book, Fun in the Tub, that uses cocoa butter, baking soda, SLSa and polysorbate 80. You can use that recipe or simply combine cocoa butter with baking soda until you get a consistency that you love! I find that when adding SLSa and polysorbate 80, it melts and emulsifies easier into the tub.

I like the consistency to be similar to a thicker glaze or royal icing. You don’t want it to run down the sides of your geode. And you don’t want it to be too thick to spread. Drizzle is forgiving. If you need to thicken it up, add more baking soda. If you need to thin it down, first heat to make sure the thickness isn’t because of the cocoa butter solidifying, then try adding more cocoa butter and melt.

Once your drizzle is ready, pour some into the center of your bath bomb and spread by rotating your bath bomb. Get it all the way to the edges. (Although, you can always add more.)

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Add dark purple salt to the very center. Place medium purple salt around the dark purple salt. Use the lightest salt for the outside. There really isn’t a right or wrong! Don’t be afraid to be creative! Add more drizzle as you go if you feel like the salt isn’t sticking well. If your drizzle solidifies too much, heat for a few seconds to loosen.

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I thought I needed more salt in the middle so I added another layer.

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Painting the Outside of your Geodes

If you’d like to paint the outside of your geodes to make them look more like rocks, that is easy to do! I almost left mine as-is, but I’m glad I painted them! Magic Mushroom mica from Nurture Soap is the perfect color for this project, but I also experimented with some earth/brown micas.

If you’d like to learn more about painting, airbrushing and decorating bath bombs, check out Robyn’s eClass – Decorating Bath Bombs!

Simply combine 91% alcohol with mica and a splash of polysorbate 80. I like to add enough mica for it to be pretty runny. (Some projects require a thick paint.) Apply using a sponge or a brush.

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I also mixed up some Gold Dust mica + Magic Mushroom mica to paint along the outside of my geode.

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Allow your geodes to completely dry before you package!

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DIY Geode Bath Bomb Recipe + Tutorial (2024)

FAQs

How do you use a so bomb DIY crystal geode kit? ›

How to make your geode bombs!
  1. Mix the powder with water! Mix together the bath bomb powders with water and stir them so they become a thick paste. ...
  2. Add in the crystals! Once the paste is pressed into the mould, choose what crystal design you want and add them to the top of your geode! ...
  3. Time for the drop!

How do you make bath bomb rocks? ›

How To Make Bath Pop Rocks
  1. Firstly wearing gloves, measure your bicarb into a bowl.
  2. Next weigh out your Ultramarine violet powder and add to your bowl, mix thoroughly by hand ensuring the colour has dispersed throughout.
  3. Then add in your Epsom salts & citric acid and mix well.

What is a substitute for SLSA in bath bombs? ›

Sodium cocoyl isethionate, also called SCI is a newer product for making great foam in personal care products. It is a gentle foaming surfactant, and is often used as a good alternative to SLS powder, or even SLSA.

How do you make an explosive bath bomb? ›

Directions
  1. In a large bowl, add baking soda, Epsom salt, citric acid and cornstarch. ...
  2. In a second bowl, mix olive oil, water, essential oil and food coloring. ...
  3. Add the liquid mix from the second bowl to the first bowl, drizzling in just a little at a time.

How do you make geode crystals? ›

Place half an eggshell in a small bowl. Fill the small bowl with salt water solution. Let soak for 3-7 days. Observe the salt particles crystallize on the eggshells to create beautiful geodes!

What makes bath bombs harden? ›

Bath Bomb Recipe Hardeners

Many recipes use either a starch, a clay, or cream of tartar to harden the final product. Our Bath Bomb and Fizzy Base contains cornstarch as a hardener. Some recipes use tapioca starch. I like to use a combination of Kaolin Clay and cream of tartar.

What makes a bath bomb fizz? ›

Many bath bombs contain citric acid, as found in citrus fruits, and sodium bicarbonate, which is a weak base. The dry chemicals are stable, but in water they react together to produce carbon dioxide bubbles (fizz) and, as a by-product, sodium citrate salt.

How do you make a crackle bath? ›

Simply sprinkle Crackle Baff powder into a bath full of water and listen to it crackle, pop and fizz! The water will change colour too! Why not add some bubble bath for extra fun? Crackle Baff Colours dissolves completely, so when play has finished simply pull the plug and drain your bath as normal.

What is the best foaming agent for bath bombs? ›

The most popular form of the Sodium lauryl sulfoacetate is powder. The next being SLSA coarse, and then the flake. The coarse and the powder are often used in bath bombs and bubble bars and other similar foaming bubbly products. Like SCI, the SLSA produces very high quality long lasting foam.

What ingredient makes bath bombs stick together? ›

Oils are a great way to moisten bath bombs and add skin-loving properties. Start with about 0.5 ounces per pound. Some crafters use 99% isopropyl alcohol, but it can dry the bath bombs out so they're more likely to crack. Try a combination of oil and alcohol to hold the mixture together.

How do you make fizz balls? ›

Instructions
  1. Mix the Baking Soda and Constarch. Mix the baking soda and cornstarch in a large mixing bowl. ...
  2. Add Essential Oil. Add the essential oil a few drops at a time into the mixture and mix until fully incorporated. ...
  3. Add the Coloring. ...
  4. Add the Water. ...
  5. Add the Citric Acid. ...
  6. Mold the Ball. ...
  7. Smooth the Sides. ...
  8. Let the Balls Dry.
Sep 8, 2020

How do you make fragrance bath bombs? ›

Making Bath Bombs
  1. Mixing. Mix 2 parts of sodium bicarbonate to 1 part citric acid in a large mixing bowl. ...
  2. Adding colour and fragrance to your mixture. In a separate bowl, mix your liquids. ...
  3. Prepare for packing into moulds. ...
  4. Moulding.

What happens if you put a geode in a rock tumbler? ›

Throw a geode in the tumbler and it will be toast. If you must experiment, do so with a cheap bits of Brazilian amethyst geode; the crystals will wear off leaving the greyish banded quartz rind, which is much tougher.

How do you make crystal geode eggs? ›

Glue eggs: Set the shells inside the egg carton. Brush the entire inside of the empty shell with a thin layer of glue and dust with Epsom salt (this will act as a starter crystal). Let dry completely (a few hours). Boil water: Boil 1 cup of water and remove from heat (an adult's job).

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