(08-18-2016, 11:43 PM)dfoulk Wrote: I was speaking with a soap maker the other day (not Will at B&M) about a bunch of stuff and he mentioned to me that someone complained about the color of his soap. This was a total surprise to me that anyone even cared the slightest bit. My response was "What the hell difference does it make what color it is?" As long as it doesn't impact the performance of the shave I couldn't care less if it were, brown, green, blue or purple. It makes no difference to me at all.
The one exception I can think of is GFT released a Violet soap that some have stated would stain their brush. I tried it anyway and didn't experience the staining myself but I only used it one time. So, I guess I don't want a soap that'll stain my brush but other than that I don't care what color it is.
So I'm wondering why the color of a soap even matters, it's just soap.
It’s not the color of the soap – it’s the color of the lather. BadDad and primotenore got the short answer right. It looks like sewage. The long answer is more complicated.
First, GFT Rose will give a slight stain to a brush. The lather is a bit pinkish. While wet, the brush tips will take on this color, which can be disconcerting. However, once dried, they dry a normal color. But pinkish lather might bother some.
Second, GFT Violet is a light purple color and will stain the tips of brushes worse than the Rose. However, it takes more than drying. Once you use the brush with “normal” color soaps the tips of the brush go back to normal – in my experience. But these could freak out those who wonder if their white tips are ruined. Now to this color.
Forget about the small numbers of people in this niche “hobby”. The vast majority of men view shaving as a mundane task they hate. It’s a waste of time usually done in the early AM and a pain. Think about it. Who wants to scrape a sharp object against their skin, scrape away skin cells, and then throw alcohol on top causing pain? Does that make sense – and pay money to do it? This is how the majority views it (Not talking about a tiny minority who “can’t wait to shave”). You must view "all men who shave" and not just the tiny subset in forums. Using objects and consumables that make this journey more pleasant eases the aggravation, and make no mistake about it, for the majority of men it’s an aggravation.
So getting beyond the typical attributes of slickness, residual slickness, cushion, and scent, there are other attributes that exist. Scent is a predominate one. If it stinks, you probably wont use it and 30% of olfactory sensors can be different between users. One person’s rose is another’s sewage. Beyond olfactory, there is the tactile or face feel. Some lathers “feel” better than others. They feel thick and soft while others are thin or bubbly even if the bubbles are tiny. Beyond tactile is the auditory feedback. I can just listen to the blade cutting and know which lather is doing a better job at hydration. Some just sound better doing their job and you know it. Last is the visual feedback.
Throughout history, and I will only go back to the 50s where are there are many examples of commercials; soap is white (i.e., lather), period. White denotes cleanliness. This is ingrained into about everyone. Ivory soap is 99 and 44/100% pure, whatever that means. Colored soaps, when lathered, turn white. A pinkish lather or light violet lather from GFT, to me, looks weird, but does not denote dirt, just strange.
So I fill by sink with warm water, rinse the razor, and its starts to turn brown. I looked at my notes on this and noted the lather looked like milk chocolate. My sink turned a light brown, and by the end of shaving it looked like sewage (going back to what baddad said).
It doesn’t matter if it’s the BEST soap ever. While olfactory, audible, and tactile senses are important, nothing is more important than the visual cues. So draw your own logical conclusions. In a world where many people declare that all the good soaps are more or less alike, which one are you going to use?
One that looks good to you or one that looks … less than desirable? If your sink looks dirty, it doesn’t matter how good the soap might be – to me it just looks dirty.