Ditto the use of 2 or 3 drops to improve the lather. I have skin sensitive to menthol and eucalyptus (due to Rosacea) and have concocted my own uber lather that takes care of the problem of getting a comfortable shave.
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Ditto the use of 2 or 3 drops to improve the lather. I have skin sensitive to menthol and eucalyptus (due to Rosacea) and have concocted my own uber lather that takes care of the problem of getting a comfortable shave.
pfries, deposit a dollar in my PayPal account and I will send you the first, authenticated, authorized, explicit, magical, extraordinary almost public formula of the Razorfeld Rash Relief Shaving Soap/Cream Extravaganza Potion guaranteed to make any woman in your life swoon at the results of your next shave and have dogs in the street lay at your feet in total obedience.
You're welcome.
Aloha!
I realize this is an old thread, but I discovered a good use for some so-called "Shave Oil" i purchased.
Attachment 269623
Purchased this as a "Shave Oil" but it really is a gel marketed toward women for leg shaving. A few reviews were from men saying that it was a good shave oil. I tried it as a shave oil (actually a gel undercoat) with lather on top and it's not that good in that combination for my skin and shaving. But when I read the ingredients and realized the top ingredient was Glycerin, I decided to add a pump to some soaps and creames that really don't lather much for me. I like Colonel Conk's Line soap but it's low-lather for my water. With a squirt of this gel on top of the soap cake with some water and YOW! Super lather. Great shave. The same with Cremo. I really like Cremo but it's very low-later by design. A squirt of this in my bowl with some Cremo and it's now a decent laterhing cream.
FYI.
-Zip
I've been using 3 or so drops of glycerin in the bowl before I mix lather for as long as I can remember. I was firmly convinced that it was working wonders.
Recently I went on a 2+ week vacation and didn't take the glycerin.
During the time I noticed absolutely no difference in the lathering, the slickness, the glide or anything else.
Now I'm not so sure about the working wonders part.
Pete <:-}
If it is a good soap, there really is no need to add more glycerin as the soap should have a sufficient amount of glycerin in it, along with other good ingredients.
This is one of the main reasons I much prefer tallow-based soaps. :)
A good soap should require no additions, if you need to add glycerin IMO, you're using the wrong soap or not getting the soap / water ratio correct.
Aside from that, too much glycerine will fry your face and completely dry your skin out.
I sometimes add a drop or 2 as a substitute for water if my lather is a bit dry while whipping. Although I cannot say that there is a definite night & day improvement, I do not notice any adverse effects from it. :shrug: