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01-28-2009, 06:05 AM #1
And so it begins. TGQ soaps are incredible. They have turned me from creams they're that good. Get the Leatherneck.
I have found that the creams will congeal with time. You can soak a portion in hot water for easier lathering. Just as you soak the soaps. I don't soak the soap since our water is very soft here and it lathers readily.
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01-28-2009, 06:55 AM #2
Don't soak soap. Seriously--don't do it. It will very quickly destroy your soap, and then you're SOL. To help with lathering, you can put a teaspoon or so of water on the top of your puck while you're showeinr or whatever, but anything more than that and you're asking for trouble, especially with glycerin soaps.
You don't describe your technique, so that might be the problem. It's all a matter of water volume. You need to make sure that, with soaps, your brush isn't TOO wet when you start. Load your brush well, and then start to lather. As the lather builds, you will get a feeling for when you need to add a touch of water. Try feeling it with your fingers; if it's smooth and slick, it's fine.
With the Kent/MWF, you said it left a residue. That tells me you're not using enough water, or your water is very hard. That can effect your lathering a lot.
One thing, your BK4 is a very soft brush, or so I've heard, and may be somewhat difficult to get loaded with soaps. Creams should not be a problem, though, so I'm not sure what the issue there is; even a hardened cream should lather just like a soap.
One piece of advice--stick to ONE product until you can use it. They all are a little different, and if you hop around too much you'll only end up confusing yourself. Stick to one product until you can lather it consistently, then try to change it up.
Good luck!
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01-28-2009, 07:00 AM #3
+1 on what JimR said, just a splash of water on the puck while you are showering. Also, you mention Mantic's videos. If you follow his technique of lathering in a bowl and adding a bit of water as you go this may be more effective. It works well for me. I usually load the brush on the puck of soap and go to the bowl in which I have added an almond sized dollop of cream.
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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01-29-2009, 05:43 AM #4
I guess it depends on the definition of "soak". What I typically do is load my brush with water, then let it drain when held or gently tilted. Then I shake the brush out over the soap - it's usually enough to cover the soap about 1/8" deep. Then I shake the brush out, pour the soapy water into my lather bowl, swirl the dry brush on the softened soap, and return to the lather bowl to mix up.
This last time, I scored the surface of the soap first with a blunt knife, then after I added the water, I set the soap dish into a tub of hot water. I think I got better results this way.
The other creams I've tried have been fine - for some reason those two samples from TGQ just seemed poor. It could be my water, it could be I need to use more cream - or perhaps these two sample just happened to be "off". I AM curious if anyone here who enjoys TGQ products prefers the creams to the soaps - which would give me a reason to try them again.
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01-29-2009, 04:57 PM #5
Have you read these articles from wiki
Illustrated Guide to Making Basic Soap Lather - Straight Razor Place Wiki
Illustrated quide to making basic cream lather in three different ways - Straight Razor Place Wiki
I have Kent BK 4 too and althouht softness it is a very good brush to create a suberb lather.
Here is another wiki article where you can see differencies of brushes. To sum up boar's and pure badger's don't hold so much lather than e.g BK4.
Brushes - Straight Razor Place Wiki
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01-30-2009, 03:35 AM #6
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01-30-2009, 03:29 PM #7
If you guys all would use the soap lathering technique given by Kaptain_Zero in the pasted post below, it woudn't matter how hard your water is, how soft your brush is, and you wont have to worry about ruining your soap.
I had been putting about a tablespoon of hot water on my soap pucks (as I think alot of guys do), and while the results weren't bad, the Kaptain's method is far better:
This technique even works well on my Gold-Dachs Especial, which isn't one of the best soaps to get a really good lather from.