(06-04-2017, 01:44 PM)Marko Wrote: Hi Shawn, I want to thank you for doing this AMA but most of all I want to thank you for crafting some of the best post shave products I've ever used. The post shave soothing, conditioning and man, the scents are out of this world. Your scents are unique, imaginative and flat out awesome and the way you root your products in the history of the great city of St. Louis and the surrounding area is pretty cool. Whenever you do a collaboration with a soap maker the Chatillon Lux scent makes the soap a very special soap.
My questions are how did you get started in the post shave world? What was your inspiration? Have you always been interested in scent in general and the blending of unique and creative scents as well?
Thanks Shawn, I wish you all the success and happiness that its possible to have and I look forward to more amazing creations coming from your nose/mind down the road.
Cheers,
Mark
Thanks, Mark! It's easy to make STL sound cool if you have a love affair with the city. I love it. My girlfriend is from Barbados and despises winter with ever fiber in her being, but she has fallen in love with the city so much that she actually tolerates the weather. It's one of the best endorsements I can think of.
The way I started was with the salve. I was a new shaver and was going through my first winter without a beard in a while. That winter was super harsh (not compared to yours, but still, for a relative southerner like myself) and single-degree (F) highs daily were killing my face. Some nice person had sent me a sample of L'Occitane Cade balm, which was amazing, but I started looking at the ingredient list and started wondering if I could make something myself in lieu of paying so much for a tube.
I have an inability to get into a hobby or interest casually. So once I started experimenting, I got super hardcore about it. Then, after a while, I began sharing it with my friends, who encouraged me to start a business. So I got off the ground with my very, very good friend as a business partner and he helped encourage me and ground me. Even though he left, Chatillon Lux never would have happened if it were not for him during those early days when we were basically inventing the wheel with every single thing we did.
As far as scents go, this is an interesting thing. During my high school days, aquatic fragrances were all the rage. I had a bottle of Tommy, and my college girlfriend made me wear Acqua di Gio. All of these scents were fine, but I never found them to be particularly interesting.
But I always did have an interest in scents thanks to my dad growing up. Not fragrances, because he wore Old Spice exclusively for 40 years until I started making aftershave. My dad was a forestry major and has managed a contractor-focused lumberyard for over three decades. I used to love visiting when I was a kid, when he would take me around showing me all the different types of lumber. He would sniff each board and have me smell it, telling me why he liked it so much. His favorite is red cedar wood. He always got excited if we came by the saw area and someone had just cut red cedar, because that meant we could go smell the shavings. He would take me to job sites and have me smell closets lined in cedarwood. When my parents first had a home constructed, he made the wet bar...you guessed it...red cedar. He and I also enjoyed camping, and we would smell all the flowers, undergrowth and plants of all kinds.
So now you know why I like green, woody and earthy scents. I made my dad a scent for Father's Day last year called Lumberyard Man. It was designed to smell just like his lumberyard after cutting some red cedar. Only he and I have that scent and I will never let anyone else ever use it. It's the scent I was most excited to make ever.
Thanks for the question, Mark! I sometimes wish I had gotten into fragrance at an earlier age, but then I remember that I am really happy with the journey that brought me to it.