We wet shavers however won't survive a reformulation of our favourite tallow soap.
Are you surprised that people who do traditional wet shaving get pissy about manufacturers and sellers trying to be trendy and appease nonbuyers?
We wet shavers however won't survive a reformulation of our favourite tallow soap.
Are you surprised that people who do traditional wet shaving get pissy about manufacturers and sellers trying to be trendy and appease nonbuyers?
I'm not massively enthusiastic about the reformulation of Vitos Red & Green. I have a suspicion Cella might be next. As they are croaps, there seem to be a few reports of them going off in the long run so they aren't ones that can be 'hoarded' like some others.
If the German shave sticks (Tabac, Wilk Sword, Palmolive, Speick) are reformulated, I may as well just grow a beard and live in the forest.
I personally don't care if soap is tallow, palm, coconut based or a detergent. I evaluate the performance with my skin and value for my budget. What annoys me is ideology and political tribalism permeating in every pore of our lives, even freaking shaving.
A hundred years? Who cares...
Let's change the time frame to 10 or 20 years.
Weird thought: It's entirely possible that shaving soaps and brushes will once again become the norm. Was surprised to find vinyl records on sale again, along with turntables, and they may pass CD sales this year (didn't see a comparison to streaming and MP3). Ten years ago, it looked like vinyl would be completely gone by now.
So who knows? If vinyl can come back, why not brush and soap?
I've got to say, as I'm suspiciously looking down on the steadily spinning 12" record on my turntable, I kind of like this idea. I don't exactly know why I like it so much, I just do. I guess it's meant to be
But yeah, this is entirely possible, and judging by the growing trend of work-life balance, where people try to go back to basics and focus on what they do, maybe even slightly possible....
-Daniel
Oh, never heard of them, thanks for the info!De Vergulde Hand (the gilted hand).
It exists since 1554, so I guess it will exist over 100 years or more.