(04-25-2016, 05:18 PM)Uzi Wrote: There may have been a time when words meant something precise.
Words should ALWAYS be precise. If you tell someone to meet you in a few minutes and they show up in a few hours, you will not be very happy when they say
"a few minutes, a few hours - whats the difference?"
When its a life and death situations, you better use the precise words, or you are dead.
(04-25-2016, 07:21 PM)nervosa1901@ Wrote: I think this is a good distinction. The problem with the term "artisan" as it relates to soap making is that many consumers tend to think that because those soap makers are considered to be an "artisan," they gain immediate credibility as masters of their craft and their product is better than established brands that create soap in factories instead of a garage. ...Herein lies the problem, though. If all soap makers are artisans, then what is the point of using the designation in the first place?
Very true - and that goes full circle and is why I like Bufflehead's "Shartisan" word.
What is the point of calling them artisan? Marketing - pure and simple. Whether its artisan bread, artisan pizza, artisan beer, artisan pottery, etc, its all a means for those marketing products to present an image, a way to sell you something.
Give me your money. I am an artisan. You KNOW its going to be good
OK, you are an artisan. So isn't the guy fixing shoes, the guy making pizza, the guy painting signs, and every other practitioner who is skilled in the practical application (that is, the "vulgar" or common practice) of some trade. I got no issue with that at all. So isn't the mechanic who fixes your car but they don't design cars.
OTH, some of the soap makers here are artists, and thats great (who are also skilled at the practice making them artisans as well). If I could create something from nothing, I would want to be known as an artist and elevated in the ranking, not as an artisan who simply is a "worker" (per the book definition).
For @"Uzi" the usage in colloquial language might be different. Words do change with usage over time. Some are just slang and might not hold up over time but some have truly changed. The word "fantastic" is one
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/26...47343.html "Aweful", derived from "Awe" is another.
In this case, I don't think its so much the concept of the definition changing because I don't think anyone would argue with Artisans being "skillful" in the application of their art. Rather, its the concept that "Artisans" produce better products than say factory produced products - and that's just nonsense.
I've seen "artisan" products that were - let's call them inferior" and factory produced products that were "fantastic" (which is the evolved definition).
Are SMN, MdC, CF, Klar, C&S, etc made in factories or by some little guy making small batches in their basement? I'm going to guess they are made in large quantities in some kind of factories by "artisans" who are skilled in soap making but who are not "artists" (except for those who originate the recipes).