tokenaccount posted this on the announcement thread, so I'll answer them all here.
(07-17-2016, 03:47 PM)tokenaccount Wrote: Umm, where is this thread?
Desired to interrogate Will
Seriously Will, do you own your holy grail items in each shave category?
If yes, what are they? (Pic's possible?)
If not, what are you still seeking?
If you had not gone down this path, in no particular order, who would be your top five shave soap companies/persons?
How long does it generally take for you to bring a new scent from idea to retail?
What about new products/formula's?
What percentage of idea's make it to production?
Have you ever sported serious facial hair to the point it's classified as a fully fledged beard?
Is the shave soap market for artisans over saturated?
Do you extend your generous discount to just American military, or all emergency and defence services world wide?
Last question...
What do you have in the idea's to pre production testing stages, which will blow us away?
Happy shaving buddy
1) I do, actually. The last piece of the puzzle was a razor that was durable enough to survive anything and that could give me an effortless shave every time. My Titanium Wolfman fits both criteria nicely.
2) Don't have any pics because the razor's on loan to someone else. It's the only thing I would really characterize as a "holy grail" item other than Barrister's Reserve, which I developed because the post-shave product I was looking for simply did not exist.
3) Oh, this is a tough question, largely because the community is so tightly-knit and I don't want anyone to feel snubbed. I think I'll stick with the commercial stuff because there are too many excellent artisan options to name.
In no particular order:
-Palmolive (cream and stick)
-Nivea (great products for an unbelievably low price)
-Truefitt & Hill (particularly the Ultimate Comfort cream)
-Nancy Boy (love their Replenishing cream, but all three scents are excellent)
-L'Occitane (Cade Rich is my top cream these days)
4) That depends very much on what it is. I'd say that these days it takes anywhere from three to six months, if not longer.
5) Well, Glissant took a year to develop, and Barrister's Reserve took double that time. It's not a rapid process if you want to do it properly.
6) Probably 10% of my fragrance ideas make it to production. I have notebooks full of concepts that were never developed, either because they would be prohibitively expensive, inordinately complicated, very weird (and thus likely not commercially viable), or just never made it out of the book.
7) Nope. I have very patchy facial hair. I'd look like a pedophile.
8) The artisan soap market is massively oversaturated. There is not enough of a customer base to support such a tremendous influx, and the larger companies are forced to constantly create new things (scents, bases, etc) in order to remain in the public eye. That's why we don't "just create a great signature scent and stick with it." We'd starve.
9) We do. Police, firefighters, EMTs, all armed forces, etc., here and abroad (within reason; I am not extending the discount to members of ISIS). My feeling is that, if you are willing to put your life on the line for such a cause, the least we can do is offer you a discount on some soap.