If this is the case I have croaps. In my house. Without my knowledge.Aren't most artisan soaps basically croaps (except the melt'n'pour glycerin ones)?
If there is any give to the soap when you push your finger it means it's a croap, I think. AKA soft soaps.
Off the top of my head OSP is the only artisan making creams.
I have three of those soapsWatched both. the old way was far better. The speed wrapping at the end was fab.
They are not Aleppo soaps, they are Nabulus soaps. They don't usually include Bay Oil. They have started to do a Ghar soap, probably due to events in Aleppo.The Aleppo soaps? if so.
They are not Aleppo soaps, they are Nabulus soaps. They don't usually include Bay Oil. They have started to do a Ghar soap, probably due to events in Aleppo.
Dave, glad you liked the sample. I actually find soaps easier to lather than the Castle Forbes. Or rather not so much easier , just that the consistency of the Forbes = you start with a smidge of it and go from there. Sometimes I then find I have missed lathering some of it and get a lump in the resulting lather. This does not happen when lathering a proper cream or straight on to the soap puck as a whole.
Yes, I liked the lather from the CF but it took a while, and I can't seem to completely get rid of the lumps, and I find them attaching themselves to the brush too when I go to rinse it out afterwards.
I've been using cream since I started, as it seemed it would be a good transition from ‘canned goo'. I've not really been interested in exploring soaps until using a sample of Castle Forbes Lime this week. I understand it's kind of an inbetweener (I guess this is what a ‘Croap' is?) as it took longer to lather, but then the lather was incredibly rich and luxurious.
- Do you use mainly cream or soap?
- What do you prefer about your choice to the other?
- Is the extra time & effort of loading a soap worth it, when creams seem so much easier to work with?
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