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Going back to the very basic products is a good reminder of the fact that you can shave very well with very little. There are a few things that I particularly like of La Toja soap. One of them is how easy it is to lather. Another one is its fresh scent, which reminds me of the smell of the north atlantic coast of Spain, where I'm from and live, and last but not least, the mineral salts content. I have learned that if I use this soap in a rotation, these mineral salts have a beneficial effect on my skin. Not so if I use it regularly, as in that case they give me some not so pleasant itches.
This is a soap that will do its job softening your whiskers and readying them for the blade, but that is not the best one out there when it comes to slickness. First pass is OK, but there is not that oily layer on your skin that some other products leave, and that will allow a quick touch-up without re-lathering. Do that with La Toja, and you'll feel the blade. Need a touch-up?. Get your brush and re-lather. Its Spanish entry-level counterpart, the Lea stick, is much more slick and protective in this sense. Shame the scent sucks. This is not a shaving soap I'd use on a regular basis, but it's definitely worth to have in your rotation. And it's dirt cheap.
The Omega brush lost a hair during my face lathering process but it performed as pleasantly and efficiently as always. You just can't ask for more for a 13€ brush.
I've been doing some testing including and excluding the alum block from my shaves. It looks like it's beneficial so it's here to stay. After today's two-passes shave (WTG-XTG+touch ups) it showed little to no irritation, so I consider that a good sign. After that, a splash of my home brewed after shave lotion. Nothings works better on my skin so far.
Edwin Jagger DEL89L
Astra "blue" #3 (and off she goes)
Omega 31052
La Toja
Alum
Home made after shave lotion
Going back to the very basic products is a good reminder of the fact that you can shave very well with very little. There are a few things that I particularly like of La Toja soap. One of them is how easy it is to lather. Another one is its fresh scent, which reminds me of the smell of the north atlantic coast of Spain, where I'm from and live, and last but not least, the mineral salts content. I have learned that if I use this soap in a rotation, these mineral salts have a beneficial effect on my skin. Not so if I use it regularly, as in that case they give me some not so pleasant itches.
This is a soap that will do its job softening your whiskers and readying them for the blade, but that is not the best one out there when it comes to slickness. First pass is OK, but there is not that oily layer on your skin that some other products leave, and that will allow a quick touch-up without re-lathering. Do that with La Toja, and you'll feel the blade. Need a touch-up?. Get your brush and re-lather. Its Spanish entry-level counterpart, the Lea stick, is much more slick and protective in this sense. Shame the scent sucks. This is not a shaving soap I'd use on a regular basis, but it's definitely worth to have in your rotation. And it's dirt cheap.
The Omega brush lost a hair during my face lathering process but it performed as pleasantly and efficiently as always. You just can't ask for more for a 13€ brush.
I've been doing some testing including and excluding the alum block from my shaves. It looks like it's beneficial so it's here to stay. After today's two-passes shave (WTG-XTG+touch ups) it showed little to no irritation, so I consider that a good sign. After that, a splash of my home brewed after shave lotion. Nothings works better on my skin so far.
Edwin Jagger DEL89L
Astra "blue" #3 (and off she goes)
Omega 31052
La Toja
Alum
Home made after shave lotion