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Why is my bowl lather so lame?

I usually face lather and get consistently good results at this point.

However, when I get a .5 oz. or less sample I'll smush the soap down into a thin, even layer using one of those collapsible slow-feed pet bowls. Every time I get a foamy bullshit lather.

I'm unsure how to get an equally wet and slick lather with the bowl. Do I just need to keep adding water? Move to the face sooner? Give up and grow a beard?

15 comments
  • The slow feed bowl doesn't work for me either. The nubs get in the way of picking up the soap. It's me general criticism of most lather bowls. The ridges are counterproductive.

    I suspect that if you use a smooth-bottomed bowl to create a big surface of soap (like in the tub), then you'll load just fine

  • I usually face lather. I treat samples as pucks of soap, but in the wrong container. To lather with a sample I take about 1/4 teaspoon of soap and spread it thinly in the bottom of a Captain’s Choice lather bowl, or if I’m traveling, I use a curved portion (dry and clean) of the sink that I’m shaving over.

    I take the brush that’s been soaking, squeeze most of the water out, then start building a soap paste with it in whatever container I’m using. I only add water if a thick paste is not forming. When a paste has been created from most of the sample, I take what’s not in the brush, put that on the brush, then just face lather; adding water as necessary to build the wet, slick lather I want.

    So, basically, I always face lather.

  • I cannot speak for your bowl, but I have this one, and it works well.

    I don't spread the soap out evenly, and not very thinly. How do you add water? And how lang do you lather?

    Maybe check out sgrdddy or Kevy Shaves (on youtube) on how they do it.

    Give up and grow a beard?

    😱

  • Sample lathering is quite a PITA for people who prefer to lather directly on their face/head, I feel your pain.

    I'd also suggest another minimalist alternative to make it as close to face lathering as possible. Small glass or porcelain ashtrays (cleaned ofc) or candle coasters make for a good solution if the only camembert available in your area doesn't come with a cool porcelain dish. You can easily find those, even vintage ones if you prefer thrift stores/flea markets. Spread the soap evenly with a guitar pick or wide popsicle and simply load as if it was a soap puck. Any sample that isn't by Stirling Soap is only designed to give you 3 to 5 uses max anyway, so be generous with the amount of soap you're spreading in there.

    • That's a good idea, I'll pop into a thrift store at some point and see.

      I also have these 2 oz tins that I put Stirling samples into for brush loading. Perhaps I should just reserve one of those for lathering up other samples...

      • Great idea! An empty 2 oz aluminium tin is even better, as it won't break easily like glass or porcelain. You might be able to find another one in a thrift store too.

15 comments