(This post was last modified: 11-01-2017, 07:26 AM by Tbone.)
(10-13-2017, 10:15 PM)hawns Wrote: So you just assume that artisanal shaving makers are untalented and uneducated?
The words artisinal and artisan have been very overused and misapplied. Anything so labeled is now generally suspect, often justifiably so. The same thing happened with the word "natural" several years ago. For example, the overpriced, mediocre pizza sold by a restaurant near me. They call it "artisan pizza" to make it sound exclusive and niche, and then jack the price up through the roof. That happens with a lot of other products, and the public has started to wise up. Unfortunately, the wheat is getting thrown out with the chaff.
Quote:I have taken educational courses and certification courses and my fragrances sell outside of the shaving world. Just because someone makes shaving supplies doesn't make them untalented or unable to properly understand the art of perfumery.
But not everybody is you. Some "artisan" products smell so bad that they qualify as chemical weapons, and are therefore banned under the Geneva Convention. Somebody deciding to make the fragrance equivalent of bathtub gin and calling it artisan won't make it smell any better. There are also some cottage industry perfumers who are quite good, with a small percentage being brilliant.
(10-14-2017, 01:42 AM)jar Wrote: What does EdT mean?
Eastern daylight Time. It is also French for "I am too lazy to spell out eau de toilette".