Soap Bubble Wiki
Advertisement
20130613 pva from b

Japanese PVA Laundry Starch

Some Japanse laundry starch is based on a mixture of modified rice starch and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA -- not to be confused with polyvinyl acetate which is also called PVA).

It is a critical ingredient in some Japanese bubble juice formulas. It seems to interact in a special way with the Japanese Charmy dishwashing liquid. Mr. Hisao Oono has published his recipe and makes some of the world's most amazing bubble tubes with it.

This ingredient does not seem to have the same synergy with the Proctor & Gamble dishwashing liquids.

Many brands of Japanese laundry starch will work, but you must be sure that they do not contain anti-foaming agents. Some PVA-containing laundry starch contains them, and those brands will not work.

It is not clear if the benefit is from the PVA or the modified rice starch or the combination of the two. Evidence seems to suggest that it is not simply the PVA itself as many bubblers have experimented with adding PVA by itself and found it of limited (if any) benefit.

Japanesestarch3

Japanese laundry starch (more). My source has used the starches on the left and on the right and the picture in the middle is from a Japanese web page about soap bubbles.

JapaneseLaundryStarch bryce

A wiki contributor has used this starch as an ingredient in his bubble juice.

Oono pvastarch

Mr. Hisao Oono of Japan uses this laundry starch. Find out more at http://soapbubbler.blog.fc2.com/blog-category-9.html

20130722 EAS charmy pvastarch

Edward Spiegel has used the PVA-containing starch in the middle with Charmy.

Advertisement