(07-21-2016, 02:51 PM)grim Wrote: (07-21-2016, 02:37 PM)Pete123 Wrote: The issue isn’t your question. The issue is the tone of your post.
Statements like “…threw away money .... flush down the sink.” and “Are these people proud they had left over lather?” are derogatory comments which detract from the quality of this, or any, forum.
It’s like our mothers taught us, “If you can’t say something nice then don’t say anything.”
Asking why they threw lather down the sink is degratory? That might be your interpretation but that is your choice to do so. One reason many people choose this "hobby" is to save money. They tout things like:
"I can get 10 shaves from one blade and they cost 10 cents each vs $5 per cartridge"
or
"There is no need to buy anything more than Arko, everything else is a waste of money" (I read this a lot)
or
"No need for a badger brush, my $10 synthetic is perfect, anything else is a waste" (I read that one yesterday)
and it goes on and on and on with reasons why traditional wet shaving is superior, based upon financial reasons, than cartridge systems
Your questioning saving money by using only the amount of lather you need? How does that jive with the foundational arguments people make to convert cartridge shaves to traditional wet shaving?
To save money, you don't get to pick and choose just the attributes you like without looking at the process holistically. If you want to save money, you do so across the board:
1. from the tools you use, the sunk costs
2. the consumables you use, and
3. the techniques you use.
You can't say I got 10 shaves per blade and at a dime each thats a penny per shave and then dump 50 cents of lather down the drain. What's the old saying "Penny saved, dollar foolish"? That's why I brought it up.
How many people legitimately save money switching to traditional methods? From $75 badger brushes to $15 for 4oz of soap, and all manner of money well spent, who among us has deluded ourselves into thinking this will save us money beyond the first month of our introduction? Seriously? And those prices are really at the lower end of the spectrum.
The people that do this to save money aren't participating on shave forums, because hobbies do not save money. None of them. Hobbies, by their very nature, are a non-essential form of entertainment that requires some form of investment, almost always monetary. This particular hobby happens to be a very expensive one if you let it.
For someone to sit there and lather their $20 soap with an $80 brush, to use their $125 stainless steel razor, and a $20 handcrafted splash to be worried about a few extra pennies of lather going down the drain is pretty silly.
I know...it's all about the cost per shave. Yea, yea...nice justification, but nothing more than that at the end of the day. Each of us has hundreds of dollars sitting in a corner of our bathrooms at a minimum. To shave. Why any of us would be worried about someone else losing a few pennies down the drain is beyond me...
You keep saying this is an innocent question of "why don't people only make the lather they need?", but you also keep insisting that the "real issue" is how a single person went through 20 soaps in 6 months. I say it again...if that is the "real issue" in your mind...ask him. I'm sure he would be happy to have a polite interaction about his process. He seems a very friendly individual both on G+ and facebook, so ask him about his process.
And yes...anytime someone suggests that their way is the only way or the best way, and any other way is a waste of money/time/whatever is derogatory. The implication is that the individual making the statement is smarter and more efficient than anyone with a different perspective, and it can come across as both insulting and demeaning. Intentions may not be as such, but still...
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