(This post was last modified: 08-16-2024, 02:06 AM by Tedolph.)
I have been following this thread with interest, but have been hesitant to participate as I believe that my fundamental philosophy of wet shaving is likely to be offensive to the wet shaving hobbyist, or at least not affirming. I also apologize for the length of this rant. I think that if done correctly with the right kind of products (which we already have), and the right kind of trade channels (which we might have through Amazon), wet shaving is not only growing, but can explode and liberate the masses from the slavery of the cartridge shaving /canned goo world, the condescension of Gillette, et al., and the misery of electric shaving. Let me explain.
We recently had a thread about the Poor Man's Luxury shave where many of you put together fantastic quality sub $50.00 shave kits (razor, boar brush, soap, blades, etc.) that would last a wet shaver a lifetime and reduce annual costs to less than $15.00 with quality and enjoyable products We then had a thread about "technique trumps tools" where we put together a list of ten (OK, just nine) tips which would lead a new wet shaver to great results since Dad isn't there in the bathroom to teach him.
I think that we are on the cusp of this great revolution. The avarice of Gillette et al. and contempt that they have for their customers knows no bounds. They keep making more and more expensive single pass cartridges that do more and more skin damage. People are getting fed up. The Art of Shaving kind of tapped into this but frankly at the wrong price point. I see why they had to follow that model what with the price of mall store rents being what they are, but they did pick up on the zeitgeist of the wet shave movement. At the other end of the spectrum, the Dollar Shave Club is anything but one dollar, and considering what you get is just as much of a rip off. If somehow we could get quality, inexpensive wet shave products back into CVS and Wallgreen's, with some sort of educational component, this movement would explode. As far as electrics go, over many decades of shaving I have used every type generally available, and to this day when I have to use an electric, i just feel..........defeated.
It's just too bad that Williams, Surrey (now VDH) and Old Spice shave soaps, Eveready C40 brushes and Shick injector razors are things of the past. The fact that there are still some high quality mass market shave products that have been in existence for over 50, 60 or 100 years is evidence that there is still a market for wet shaving products Keep in mind, our grandfathers, or maybe great grandfathers, were perfectly happy with one razor, one brush and one soap for their entire lives. This is a model that wouldn't work for most people here, but it would work for most men all around the world.
To me, this is sort of a Great Commission to free our brethren from the mesmerism of Gillette super bowl advertising. While I think that there is absolutely nothing wrong with buying a $400.00 Theirs Issard straight razor or paying $30.00 for the latest C6 base artisan shave soap, it does not from my perspective, do anything that my $12.00 Gold Dollar 208 and a tub of Cella can't do. Moreover, from a macro perspective it isn't going to free the masses. It is just going to take someone to put it all together, provide the information necessary to use the products, and then get it into mass market channels of trade to make it all happen.
I apologize if I stepped on anybody's toes but this is my best answer to the OP's query.