(This post was last modified: 02-26-2023, 06:30 PM by Southsider.)
(02-25-2023, 02:42 AM)AlphaFrank75 Wrote:(02-25-2023, 01:42 AM)Southsider Wrote: American Vintage is a very nice scent. However, I do agree with other posters who have noted that the base is very soft, almost too soft.Yeah, I agree, although for me it doesn't matter. I bowl lather so whether I load form the tub or scrape some up for the lather bowl it's the same. I regularly switch between loading from the tub or digging up some for the bowl. I loaded from the puck today for a very long count. What I wiped up with my finger from the puck and spread on my whiskers was enough to create plenty of lather for a 3 pass shave. Then I had a brush with 3x as much soap to build a lather from. So from now on I'll be scraping up some for the bowl.
About the scent. Leather scents from frags or soaps are down on the bottom of my dislike pile of notes. AV is the first soap with a leather note that I really like. With only a couple of uses, leather is pretty much the only note I can actually identify. The rest is just a pleasant background scent.
With regard to the softness of the soap, it is not a major problem, just annoying. I too bowl lather. When I do so with American Vintage, the soap migrates to the outer edge of my Captain's Choice bowl and is harder to incorporate into the lather. Once created the lather performs well.
With regard to the scent, I get a lot of wood. Notes from MacDuff's indicate rosewood and mahogany along with leather.
"Notes: Tobacco, Rosewood, Leather, Mahogany, Lemongrass, Citrus, Ho Wood, Cedarwood, Oakmoss, Spice. American Vintage is primarily a tobacco scent that’s sweetened with the earthy rose-esque notes of rosewood and ho wood essential oils. The tobacco base is complimented with the richness of mahogany and leather with the earthiness of cedarwood and oakmoss." (from The Razor Company website).
The wood notes are natural to my amateur nose presumably because of the essential oils used while the leather is probably aroma chemicals. I think that overall it is well done.
Taking into account the above-mentioned minor criticism, I would recommend American Vintage. It reminds me of how that acoustic Guild Guitar smelt when I purchased it in 1969 from a guitar store in Santa Monica, California. Smells sometimes stay with you.