(09-05-2019, 02:37 PM)Marko Wrote: I would agree that the wet shaving market is, if not maturing then at least changing from how things were over the past five or six years. Thats all I can comment on because that's how long I've been doing this. I recall the storefront breaking releases of Hallows and the very real anger vented by many who weren't able to get the products they wanted. I also remember being able to buy those new releases without any difficulty whatsoever as well as being able to send James an email , getting on his list, discussing what I wanted and having a Wolfman razor delivered in a few months. Then things blew up.
The same general thing has been going on since I started traditional wetshaving in 2007. Vendors would appear, then most would eventually disappear over time. In parallel, an increasing number of new vendors would appear.
I was always put off by the hyper-materialistic aspect that eventually developed in wetshaving. I understand that trying a bunch of different things appeals to some folks. When the focus shifted almost entirely to constantly buying and accumulating large personal hoards, then wetshaving became something much different. The balance between acquiring and the experience of learning and using largely vanished. People bouncing off the walls because they could not certain products they want is ridiculous. Really? Seriously people? We have dozens, sometimes hundreds, of products in each category and you are flipping out because you can't get that specific one? That is just plain silly IMHO.
Quote:Initially I wanted to try everything but that was unsustainable. I then decided I'd buy new releases only from artisans I really like but that also has proven unsustainable. I've accepted that not only can I not have everything, I actually don't want everything. I become crushed under the weight of stuff. I used to begin the day with a cup of coffee while browsing new arrivals and release schedules. Every day. Now I rarely look at that stuff. There's a den clearing a coming that I know.
I have seen people post those sentiments so many times: They want to try lots of different things, eventually realize they have way too much stuff, and then get rid of all but a small number of their very favorite things. They do seem much happier afterwards.
If the buy-and-try approach is done to find what they really like best, I think there is a better way. Just look at the reviews for an item on the various forums. Something that gets consistently high marks from multiple reviewers is very likely to work well for you, too. In times past, people would say "no, no, NO! Your mileage may vary." like some strange mantra, as if to imply my mileage would *always* vary. I found that to be largely BS. Sure, my experiences would differ from others to some extent, but far from always. The forum review method of selecting items has worked very well for me so far.
If spending a wad of cash and having tons of stuff is someone's thing, hey it's their money, their life, and their decision. But that is accumulating, or rarely, collecting, not traditional shaving per se.
Quote:The hardware side is interesting - some of the old guard have vanished. Anyone bought an Ikon razor lately? They were hot once. Still, they made some decent razors. Same goes for Above The Tie. As far as Rockwell is concerned, there may not be much discussion but for me its still my daily driver. Very good razor and the one that led me to putting the brakes on further acquisitions. I see no need anymore. I've also bought too many supposedly game changing razors that were more hype than change.
Traditional wetshaving seems to be very new, bright, shiny object driven. When a new product comes along, the old products are dropped and forgotten. Everyone then starts using the new products. Anyone remember
Ginger's Garden shaving soaps? They used to be highly praised and widely used. Ditto for the
The Soap Opera Himalaya Shaving Soap. Both are still available and still very good, even in comparison to more recent products. I have not seen either soap mentioned in a long, long time.
Not sure where all this will lead, or if it really matters all that much in the long run.