| Bath Salts 3 Parts Epsom Salts 2 Parts Baking Soda 1 Part Sea Salt Mix thoroughly. This is now the base from which you can create a wide variety of bath salts. With this you can make a large quantity of bath salts. If two or three types of salts are desired, you can simply divide the base and set aside those portions to seperately fragranced or colored. It is wise to add the power to color to bath salts. Use plain food color for this letting it fall drop by drop onto the salt base. If two or more colors are needed to mix an exotic hue (such as purple), mix these in a spoon first, and then add to the salts to avoid having a two~toned product. Recommened colors for all bath salts mixtures are included in the recipes. For those that read color: white, simple leave them untinted. Add many drops for a darker colored salt; fewer for a lighter hue. Mix the color into the salts with a spoon until it is evely distributed. Now add the esential oils by drop, one oil at a time until the scent seems right to you. Be prepared to spend some time doing this, perhaps half an hour or so. It is important that you feel comfortable with the colors and scents. As you mix visualize the energies within the oils merging with each other and with the salts. Keep the salts magickal goal in mind as you stir. To use: Add from two tablespoons to one half cup of the ritual bath salts to a tub of water . Mix with your hands feeling the magickal powers merge with the water. While sitting in the bath imagine yourself soaking up the magickal powers. Allow yourself to receive it, or alternatively, to release specific negative energies from yourself into the water. Directly after every ritual bath (and before is good!), clean your tub throughly either with a commercial cleaner, or with a damp cloth covered with baking soda. Ritual baths taken in unclean tubs will not have the desired effect! |
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