The word "artisanal" describes a process of production, not a level of quality. An artisan is someone who follows that process of production, regardless if the quality of the end result. Crappy artisans and garbage artisnal products exist. The word "art" implirs only 2 things:created from raw materials and invoking of emotional response from the observer or user. It doesnt say anything about aesthetics, beauty, quality, technique, or utility.
Soap making, regardless of the complexity of your scent profiles, is a fairly well documented process. You can muck about with ingredients, to fine tune specitic qualities, but the premise is the same. Its like making lasagna....you can add your own enhancements to accentuate aspects you find more important to the end result, but its still lasagna...or soap...its not something new and different...its still soap.
Now...you can be an artist in creating complex scent profiles, but you are still "merely" an artisan when making the soap. Because soap follows well established guidelines that result in the functional product, making minor changes in the specific ingredients used to achieve those results is still well documented. "Tweaking" is not the same as "creating", and lets face it the basic concept of soap hasnt changed in 100 years...only the specific ingredients available to cause those established reactions. The recipe has expanded, not changed...
The last thing I want to touch on is the "theft" of scent profiles.
Frankly, if an artist is capable of deterkining by virtue of smell and exoerience what oils were used to create a specific fragrance, why should they be prevented from using that profile? Copying, cloning, mimicing...its all part of capitalism. If you want to charge high dollar for a scent, you better have quality that warrants it, lest the artisan with a good nose and a less expensive product will get your business. Thats how capitalism and a free market work.
A soap maker copying well known fragrances is good marketing. They are offering familiar, well-liked scents in their own products and offering them for sale. There is nothing wrong with that. A soap maker discovering, or discerning, specific profiles to.provide a "copy cat" fragrance are taken advantage of known market responses to bring in customers. There is nothing wrong with that, motally or ethically.
The problem comes in when those copy-cat products are wrongly marketed as an original. THIS is an ethical dilemma, it is illegal, and it should be prevented and prosecuted at all costs.
As long as the clone or copy-cat is not marketed as the original, there no conundrum. Some people will happily use the lowerbpriced clone. Others will just as happily pay more for the original, and justofy itbin any way they are comfortable.
This is how the free market works. If we didnt have this type of tiered production, the market would fail, quality would falter, and we would be paying exorbitant prices for less-than stelkar products.
Copying forces higher quality. Innovation forces copying. And the cycle continues...
Lastly...I hope the petty disagreements go away. It is so unnecessary...
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