(06-21-2020, 10:24 PM)RayClem Wrote: I have a large collection of soaps. I have tried the latest offerings of Ariana & Evans, Australian Private Reserve, Barrister & Mann, CBL. Chiseled Face, Declaration Grooming, First Line Shave, Gentleman's Nod, Grooming Department, Highland Springs Soap Company, Hub City Soap, Murphy & McNeil, Noble Otter, Oleo Soapworks, Saponificio Varesino, Shannon Soaps, Talbot Shaving, Tallow & Steel, Wholly Kaw and Zingari Man along with many others. There has been a tremendous improvement in the quality of soaps over the past couple of years. The best soaps in my den were released in the last year, one was released only last week. When I first started evaluating soaps about four years ago, I noticed significant differences in the performance. Some soaps were hard to lather. Some lathers were bubbly, or dissipated during use.Some soaps weren't quite slick enough. Some soaps had little residual slickness. Some soaps did not provide a great layer of cushion to protect my sensitive skin. Some soaps left my face feeling tight and dry.A lot of very good points in your post and as a soap maker and addressing prices.. ( can't speak for all ) but one thing I'm seeing which I'm sure everyone is seeing in our daily lives is look no further than the price of meats and other food items since the Pandemic shut us down they have increased dramatically in some cases. Supplies that I use in my Grooming products have gone up; and in some cases as high as 20% and I've seen even higher on a few items. Of course that includes all ingredients as well as Aroma ingredients. So in some cases you either got to do one of 3 things. Use lower quality ingredients and scents, put the product in a smaller containers and not sell through suppliers but directly to the customer from the website. I'll add a lot of ingredients suppliers are out of stock on some essential items I need and when they do get them back in stock they go fast and shipping is taking a lot longer than normal due to decreased employee's. I had to wait 2 weeks for an order that would normally day 3 days so it changes a lot of dynamics of doing business.
Today, I really have to pay close attention to detect differences between the best soaps. The best soaps are all easy to lather, producer a smooth lather free of large bubbles, are incredibly slick, remain slick even when no visible lather remains, and provide a nice film of protection between the blade and my skin. Finally, the best soaps leave my skin feeling soft, supple, moisturized and conditioned within minutes after the shave and leave my skin feeling wonderful for the next 24 hours. Can shaving soaps improve beyond this level? Probably, but at this point, I believe most improvements will be incremental.
I think the real challenge for soapmakers is not going to be producing a soap better than all others, but being able to produce a soap of very high quality without the cost of the soap becoming so high that a majority of the wet shaving market either can't or won''t pay the price. A few years ago, many soaps were selling for $3 per ounce. Then soaps went up to $4-5 per ounce. Now we see soaps at the $6 - 8 per ounce price. Fortunately, the quality of soaps has gone up as the cost has increased, but will people still purchase soaps that cost $10 - 12 per ounce. I do not mind paying $6 - 8 per ounce for a superb soap, but beyond that, I am not sure.
Also to consider is if I take the same Shave soap formula and add a inexpensive fragrance oil commonly used in candles, bar soap making and yes shave soaps my soap would be less expensive. If I move to using let's say a Lemon Essential oil which is not a terribly expensive EO but it's definitely more expensive than the fragrance oil and then lets step it up and let's say I use a East Indian Sandalwood, Authentic Jasmine, Ambergris, Rose absolute, Agarwood well then the price would go way up.
So one soap maker who makes a great base could use inexpensive fragrance oils in their soap so they can keep their prices where their customer base likes them and will keep buying from them. There are so many variables to consider though when purchasing a soap. Unfortunately sometimes I think some folks not all bunch up all soap makers into one group and say how come they can sell their soaps at $18 and the other company is charging $24 for the same sized tub.