Vetiver v. (Le Père Lucien) ★★★★★ vetiver & cedar
I'm continuing my LPL love-athon with a dip into their recent Vetiver. If there are two scents I really enjoy, they are vetiver and cedar. I can wear them all year round without growing tired of them. Any day one of them comes up in the rotation is a good day. To have both blended in one excellent soap is enough to give me shivers. Neither the vetiver nor the cedar here are burly, but they smell clean and are vivid enough to cheer the heart.
So today, grinning and gleeful, I brewed up a massive bowl of suds. This soap is so much more stable than earlier versions of LPL soaps. Just as I laid down the lather for a third pass a great wet squall blew in from the sea. All the windows were open and within seconds the floors were drenched. I dropped my razor and scuttled around the place battening down the hatches and sopping up the puddles. When I got back to the sink five minutes later I was astounded to find my face still covered with a thick layer of lather. This wouldn't have been the case with the old LPL soaps. They evaporated before I could plow through the second pass. But these latest soaps in the 150 gram tins – Vetiver, Oud Neroli, Rose de Pushkar – set like mortar and still remain slick.
I'm continuing my LPL love-athon with a dip into their recent Vetiver. If there are two scents I really enjoy, they are vetiver and cedar. I can wear them all year round without growing tired of them. Any day one of them comes up in the rotation is a good day. To have both blended in one excellent soap is enough to give me shivers. Neither the vetiver nor the cedar here are burly, but they smell clean and are vivid enough to cheer the heart.
So today, grinning and gleeful, I brewed up a massive bowl of suds. This soap is so much more stable than earlier versions of LPL soaps. Just as I laid down the lather for a third pass a great wet squall blew in from the sea. All the windows were open and within seconds the floors were drenched. I dropped my razor and scuttled around the place battening down the hatches and sopping up the puddles. When I got back to the sink five minutes later I was astounded to find my face still covered with a thick layer of lather. This wouldn't have been the case with the old LPL soaps. They evaporated before I could plow through the second pass. But these latest soaps in the 150 gram tins – Vetiver, Oud Neroli, Rose de Pushkar – set like mortar and still remain slick.
Murphy and McNeil cream: Claddgh
Though it is called a soap or a croap, this stuff is a cream. A thick viscous cream - but attacking with a brush will result in half of the container sticking to your implement. It reminds of the vulvfix density /consistency.
The scent strength is dialed down. But that is ok for me. The artisan mentions that it is a Creed Silver Mountain Water clone- but I get black tea and a light tobacco note.
No matter, this stuff is superb. Easy to lather, handles water easily, and whips into a low profile, dense, mayo like cream that results in a superb post shave.
I am looking forward to an unscented version. This will be a regular in my den's rotation.
Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
Though it is called a soap or a croap, this stuff is a cream. A thick viscous cream - but attacking with a brush will result in half of the container sticking to your implement. It reminds of the vulvfix density /consistency.
The scent strength is dialed down. But that is ok for me. The artisan mentions that it is a Creed Silver Mountain Water clone- but I get black tea and a light tobacco note.
No matter, this stuff is superb. Easy to lather, handles water easily, and whips into a low profile, dense, mayo like cream that results in a superb post shave.
I am looking forward to an unscented version. This will be a regular in my den's rotation.
Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
(This post was last modified: 03-23-2019, 11:25 PM by TommyCarioca.)
(03-23-2019, 09:56 PM)Bouki Wrote: Vetiver v. (Le Père Lucien) ★★★★★ vetiver & cedarBouki- your prose on these, and commitment to them has me intrigued. I have a Rose Pushkar puck that I really want to use on my Shetland Sheepdogs as a shampoo. The puck is about 4 years old.
I'm continuing my LPL love-athon with a dip into their recent Vetiver. If there are two scents I really enjoy, they are vetiver and cedar. I can wear them all year round without growing tired of them. Any day one of them comes up in the rotation is a good day. To have both blended in one excellent soap is enough to give me shivers. Neither the vetiver nor the cedar here are burly, but they smell clean and are vivid enough to cheer the heart.
So today, grinning and gleeful, I brewed up a massive bowl of suds. This soap is so much more stable than earlier versions of LPL soaps. Just as I laid down the lather for a third pass a great wet squall blew in from the sea. All the windows were open and within seconds the floors were drenched. I dropped my razor and scuttled around the place battening down the hatches and sopping up the puddles. When I got back to the sink five minutes later I was astounded to find my face still covered with a thick layer of lather. This wouldn't have been the case with the old LPL soaps. They evaporated before I could plow through the second pass. But these latest soaps in the 150 gram tins – Vetiver, Oud Neroli, Rose de Pushkar – set like mortar and still remain slick.
So have they reformulated? Do I try again?
Like you, I appreciate vetiver, and woody oriental fragrances , so tell me, forge ahead?
Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
(03-23-2019, 11:23 PM)TommyCarioca Wrote:(03-23-2019, 09:56 PM)Bouki Wrote: Vetiver v. (Le Père Lucien) ★★★★★ vetiver & cedarBouki - your prose on these, and commitment to them has me intrigued. I have a Rose Pushkar puck that I really want to use on my Shetland Sheepdogs as a shampoo. The puck is about 4 years old.
I'm continuing my LPL love-athon with a dip into their recent Vetiver. If there are two scents I really enjoy, they are vetiver and cedar. I can wear them all year round without growing tired of them. Any day one of them comes up in the rotation is a good day. To have both blended in one excellent soap is enough to give me shivers. Neither the vetiver nor the cedar here are burly, but they smell clean and are vivid enough to cheer the heart.
So have they reformulated? Do I try again?
Like you, I appreciate vetiver, and woody oriental fragrances; so tell me, forge ahead?
TommyCarioca, I've got this weird love/like/abhor relationship with LPL. The scents (apart from Oud Neroli) are pleasant. Generally mild, they're simple, fresh, and genuine, and smell like something you would want to wear in public. I could use any of them for days on end without tiring. The lather, however, has been another story. At times it's given me the best shaves I've ever had, exceptionally close, very clean, with a plump finish. Other times I've been burned. Figuring out how to lather LPL for a consistently close and comfortable shave has been a challenge. I must like challenges, because I've stuck with these soaps for years, and recently I've ordered even more. They seem to just keep getting better and better and at the same time I'm compelled to improve my technique.
LPL Rose de Pushkar: if you've got one of the old pucks of Rose de Pushkar, then by all means give it to the dog. I count my first puck of RdP among the three worst soaps I've ever used. Nothing wrong with the scent, but the lather was abysmal. In fact, if you love your dog, just pitch it out. The beast deserves better.
That said, I'm almost certain that RdP has been reformulated recently. It's still very simple, but the list of ingredients has grown. Shea butter, for instance, has become standard, and the soap now makes a splendid, stable lather that, among vegan soaps, almost reaches the heights of Saponificio Varesino. It smells the same as the old RdP, but the suds are far superior.
LPL Vetiver: LPL's Vetiver is stronger than say Fine's Green Vetiver, and it's got a clear cedar sidekick. It's neither mossy like Mickey Lee's Reunion nor earthy like Declaration Grooming's Dirtyver nor ashen like Salter's French Vetiver. In fact, it reminds me mostly of Proraso's Vetiver & Cypress fragrance: light citrus, a lot of wood. So, it's not breaking any ground, but I like it, and since it fades quickly, you can dump any good aftershave or edt over it without confusion.
Should you forge ahead? Well, it might be best to test the waters first just to see if the soaps and scents are to your liking. I got samples of many LPL soaps through Shavedash.com. When I hit on a fragrance I liked, I ordered full tub from Maggards or Yourshaving.com. You can also get untubbed refills of some of the older scents directly from LPL. They're just a hunk of soap wrapped in paper that you can mash into your own broadmouthed container.
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