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  1. #1
    A Newbie....Forever! zepplin's Avatar
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    Apr 2007
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    There are a lot of demonstrations at different sights that you can go to. Youtube has quite a few. As you search, you will find them. Badger and Blade has an excellent one. Here is a quick and easy one that I do:

    If you use a cream, you can just put some in your mug, about and inch and a half or so. Get your brush wet with hot water either from the tap or from any other hot water hot water source, i.e., distilled water microwaved (some areas have very hard water + chlorinated water that can retard lathering). start a small stream of water from the tap. Take your brush thats full of hot water and flick the extra water out; a couple of flicks. Start swirling your brush in the mug. Add a little bit of the hot water from the running tap, swirling your brush fast. Add more water.... Keep doing this till you lather starts building. You'll know when it starts happening. You'll start building volume and the lather will start to look like nice thick whip cream, with no bubbles. You'll get there. This method works well because you control the water ratio to the soap, You will find as you experiment with different soaps, and you will, each will require a different amount of water to get you where you want.

    Using hard milled soaps or glycerin soaps is the same except you will need to load your brush with the soap rather that put the cream in you mug. Prior to doing your prep, flick som hot water on the top of your hard soap or glycerin soap. This will allow the surface to soften a bit during the prep. When you're ready to lather, take your wet brush that has been flicked and mash it all over the surface of the soap. Work it in there good! You are loading the brush with soap. Now go to a clean mug and begin as above like you did with the cream.

    Another thing you can do with the hard milled soaps is use a small grader and just grate a small amount of your soap in to a mug. I do this because I have so many soaps already in mugs, that I don't have enough mugs to go around.

    Another tip for using the hard milled soaps: take a pocket knife and score the surface of the soap. This helps to soften the surface a little better and release more soap in your brush.

    Before long, you'll be an expert! Good luck!

    Steve

  2. #2
    Junior Member
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    Oct 2007
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    Thanks all...already got a better start with the lather....

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