Results 11 to 20 of 40
Thread: Building Lather on the Soap?
-
03-14-2016, 09:05 AM #11
- Join Date
- Oct 2015
- Location
- Munich, Germany
- Posts
- 17
Thanked: 0
-
03-15-2016, 03:13 AM #12
- Join Date
- Sep 2010
- Posts
- 2,169
Thanked: 220
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Firefighter2 For This Useful Post:
Thomptd65 (03-15-2016)
-
03-15-2016, 11:52 AM #13
I don't think anything is wrong with the method you described. For soap picks, that is exactly what I do. Even if it is a little wasteful, your puck will last forever. Using your lather in the mug method will minimize the extra dishes/junk required to shave, I.e. An extra dish.
-
03-15-2016, 05:27 PM #14
I don't even think about it anymore. I just wet a brush go right into my soap dish and rub it around until i have something that starts to look like lather and then continue to my face until I like it. I cant seem to get rid of any of my soaps fast enough, I have a dish of Tabac and another of Haslinger which I use regularly and a year later i'm still looking at them. I use these two the most only because they lather real quick and during the week quick is what i'm after. On weekends I break out my fussy soaps and creams because I have the time to play. Don't worry about it being wrong if its working for you its working.
Don't drink and shave!
-
03-15-2016, 09:40 PM #15
'BUILDING A LATHER' has always sounded kind of discordant to me, a little too he-man for what you are actually doing. I would like to submit a new term: foofing a lather!
"Call me Ishmael"
CUTS LANE WOOL HAIR LIKE A Saus-AGE!
-
04-02-2016, 02:29 PM #16
- Join Date
- Mar 2016
- Location
- Stoke-On-Trent
- Posts
- 9
Thanked: 0How I foof my lather,
I have a cheap Palmolive stick soap in a ceramic mug. I fill the whole thing up to the top with hot water and then drop in the brush. This warms the bowl, wets the soap and soaks the brush all in one. After a couple of minutes, I empty out the water, shake the brush a little and then foof the lather directly on the soap, take the brush to the face and keep foofing until the lather is nice and creamy. I have dry skin so add more water as necessary to keep it nice and moist.
The Palmolive sticks are literally pence and last approximately 273 years. I recently treated myself to some Mitchell's Wool Fat and ceramic bowl and have to admit that it is no better than the Palmolive.
-
04-02-2016, 07:12 PM #17
- Join Date
- Jan 2008
- Location
- Rochester, MN
- Posts
- 11,544
- Blog Entries
- 1
Thanked: 3795I'm in the same boat. I still have, and continue to use, about half of the puck that I started on in about 2005. After joining SRP in 2007, I bought a couple more soaps and started on the concept of rotating soaps. I've been to about 30 meet-ups and acquired at least one puck from probably half of them. I've bought at least 10 additional pucks over the years due to curiosity caused by enthusiastic praising of various soaps. Finally, because one of those was P160, which is my favorite, I bought 3 1kg bricks of it (that's 6.6 pounds!) and have most of it stashed in my fridge.
I've given away about 10 pucks, but the rest remain in piles and the only one that is even half gone is the one that I started on in 2005.
-
04-02-2016, 07:48 PM #18
- Join Date
- Mar 2012
- Location
- Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
- Posts
- 17,295
Thanked: 3225
-
04-03-2016, 03:44 AM #19
- Join Date
- Jul 2015
- Location
- Central Oregon
- Posts
- 789
Thanked: 98Far from Foofing here in farfignoogan land.
-
04-03-2016, 12:06 PM #20