{"title":"How to Make a Bath Bomb (Beginner Recipe + Molding Tips)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/other-crafts/how-to-make-a-bath-bomb","category":{"slug":"other-crafts","name":"Other Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"Creative Bath Lab","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC24lKG_IQSbrBT1-GIyrVXg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZVvdtn-b2k"},"tldr":"Make fizzing, perfectly molded bath bombs at home. Seven beginner steps from supplies to drying - plus the exact 2:1 ratio that works every time.","totalDurationSeconds":612,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["mixing bowl","fine-mesh sieve","wire whisk","stainless steel bath bomb molds","measuring cups","measuring spoons","small mixing cup","latex or nitrile gloves"],"materials":["baking soda","citric acid","corn starch","skin-safe fragrance oil","polysorbate 80","surfactant (coco glucoside or SLSA)","liquid colorant or mica powder"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Gather Your Supplies","text":"The core of any bath bomb is a 2:1 ratio of baking soda to citric acid - those two ingredients are what create the fizz when the bomb hits water. From there you can add a starch like corn starch to give the recipe a margin of error on the wet side, a skin-safe fragrance oil, an emulsifier (polysorbate 80) so the oil mixes into the bath water instead of pooling, and a surfactant for foam.For color, you have two options: liquid colorant (gentle, won't trigger early fizz) or mica powder for shimmer. Tools-wise you need a mixing bowl, a fine-mesh sieve, a wire whisk, measuring cups and spoons, and stainless steel bath bomb molds. Two-piece hemispherical molds in the 2.5-inch size are the easiest to learn on."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Sieve and Whisk the Dry Ingredients","text":"Measure 1 cup baking soda, 1/2 cup citric acid, and 1/4 cup corn starch into a fine-mesh sieve held over your mixing bowl. Tap the sieve with one hand and push any clumps through with the back of a spoon. Clumps are what cause uneven fizz and lumpy bath bombs - sieving takes about a minute and is the difference between a smooth bomb and a pockmarked one.Once everything is through the sieve, switch to a wire whisk and whisk the dry mix for about thirty seconds. The goal is to distribute the citric acid evenly throughout the baking soda so every part of the bomb fizzes at the same rate."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Measure Out the Wet Ingredients","text":"In a small measuring cup, combine your wet ingredients. For this base recipe, 15 milliliters of liquid total is the sweet spot - much more than that and the bombs start fizzing in the mold or take days to dry. A good wet blend for one batch is 7.5 ml of fragrance oil, 5 ml of polysorbate 80 (emulsifier), and 2.5 ml of surfactant (coco glucoside or SLSA).If you want to add color, stir liquid colorant or mica powder into the wet mix - not the dry. Mica mixed into the dry mix goes airborne the second you whisk it and lands all over your kitchen."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Add the Wet to the Dry Slowly","text":"Drizzle the wet mixture over the dry powder a little at a time, whisking constantly. The whisking matters - if you dump the liquid in one spot, it triggers a localized fizz reaction and you lose some of the baking soda right there. Pouring slowly while whisking spreads the liquid evenly.You will see streaks of color where the wet hits the dry. That is normal. Keep whisking until the streaks even out and the mixture looks like a uniform tinted powder."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Mix With Your Hands Until the Texture Is Right","text":"Put on a pair of nitrile or latex gloves (the mica stains hands for days) and get in there. Work the mixture together with your fingers, breaking up any remaining clumps and making sure every grain is touched by the wet mix. Two to three minutes of hand-mixing is enough.Test the texture: grab a handful and squeeze. It should hold its shape like packed wet sand and then crumble apart easily when you poke it with a finger. Too dry and the bombs fall apart when you release the mold. Too wet and they start fizzing inside the mold before you can pack the second half."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Pack and Join the Mold Halves","text":"Pick up one half of your stainless steel mold and overfill it - mound the mixture above the rim. Gently pack it down with your fingertips, then add a small amount of loose mix on top so it sits about a quarter-inch above the rim again. Repeat with the other half of the mold.Press the two halves together with firm, even pressure until they touch all the way around. Do not twist - twisting shears the bomb at the seam and you get a crack later. Just squeeze straight down on both sides until you feel the metal click together."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Release the Mold and Let It Dry","text":"Hold the closed mold gently in your palm. Tap both sides with the back of a metal spoon - light, quick taps, not whacks. The vibrations break the seal between the bomb and the metal. Carefully lift the top half away. If it sticks, tap a few more times and try again. Never pry.Set the bomb on a soft surface (a folded towel works) or rest it in a holder mold to keep its round shape. Let the bombs cure for 24 hours minimum, 48 hours if your kitchen is humid. After that they will be hard enough to wrap as gifts - tuck them in a small glass jar with a ribbon, or shrink-wrap them individually to keep them dry until use."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T16:44:53.708Z","published":"2026-05-24T16:42:21.880Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}