Shave of the day 14th May

Razor: GEM Micromatic Clug Pruf
Blade: GEM Single Edge Stainless
Brush: Gustavo Rimano Manchurian Badger, imitation horn
Lather: Krampert’s Finest Bay Rum Soap
Aftershave: Krampert’s Finest Bay Rum
Additional Care: Alum Block Scotch Porter Beard Balm

Shave of the day 11th May

Razor: Schick “Lady Eversharp”
Blade: Schick Injector
Brush: Vie-Long #12705B
Lather: CRSW Glide Morning Ghost
Aftershave: Nivea Cooling After Shave Balm
Additional Care: Alum Block & BullDog Original Beard Oil

75K visits – thank you

I just noticed that my visitor counter on my blog ticked over 75.001 unique visits, for which I’m humbled and excited over at the same time. Thank you everyone for swinging by, and happy shaving!

Discount at Pereira Shavery for my readers

I am pleased to announce that readers of my blog will get 10% discount at Pereira Shavery from today until the 31th of May 2018, if you contact them by email and use the code WW10%. You can read the review of their soap in a separate post.

Their website is at pereirashavery.com and has the necessary contact information. More information on and pictures of their products can be found at their Facebook page and Instagram at #pereirashavery

To the best of my knowledge their current products and prices is as follows:
Comb Sandal Wood 2 Sided 9.00 €
Comb Pear Tree 2 Sided 6.00 €
Comb Multi-Utility Beard 6.00 €
Strop Paddler Wood Small 11.00 €
Comb for Beard Gromming “V” shape 1 edge 9.00 €
Comb for Beard Grooming  “V”  shape 2 edges 10.00 €
Towel Pereira Shavery Embossed 7.00 €
Shavette Razors: with one finger ring 14.00 €
Shavette Razor straight 12.00 €
Shaving Brush Boar Hair 15.00 €
Shaving Soap With Activated Charcoal in Aluminum Dish 10.00 €
Shaving Soap with Activated Charcoal in Ceramic Dish 25.00 €
Shaving Soap with Activated Charcoal in Ceramic Dish And Ceramic Foam Mug 52.00 €
Shaving Soap plastic with Orange and Cinnamon 12.00 €
Strop Belt style 40 cm with leather ties 20.00 €
Strop Belt Style 46 cm Made of Cow Leather 22.00 €
Strop in Beechwood and Real Cow Hide large size 55.00 €

Review of Pereira Shaving Cream With Activated Charcoal

Short version, bottom line up front: Good soap, get some if you can find it.

The long version… well;
A little while back I was contacted by Pereira Shaving – a Portuguese soap maker – who asked me if I would like to try some of their products. Always up for a new experience, I jumped on the opportunity for a “sample” of Pereira Shaving Cream with Activated Charcoal.
Shipping from Portugal took a little over a week, but that is only to be expected when crossing multiple borders – double so considering the fact that Norway is outside the EU and every package have to go by the customs warehouse even if there is no custom to be paid.
I did spend some time looking up information on Pereira Shaving before the soap came to me, but sadly did not find much in English apart from the business being Portuguese, working from vintage recipes, had some lovely presentation of their products, and a rather interesting looking soap and shave cup combo with a brush rest. Also they have some strops on offer, but someone using a straight might be better suited to offer comments on those. Their beard combs looks interesting though… however, we’re here for the soap.
First a few pictures I want to share though… keep in mind that I expected to receive a sample; which I usually take to mean a small quantity enough for maybe a week of shaves. This is what I received:

It seems that Pereira Shavery have a somewhat different idea than I had of what consists a “sample”. They were kind enough to send me not only a full size puck, in a lovely ceramic container with the matching shave bowl with brush rest – which by itself is above and beyond what I could reasonable expect – but also a very nice looking shavette.
Presentation is – as can be seen from the photos – absolutely top notch. The soap bowl and lathering cup are both ceramic, and the soap will nest in the lathering cup when not in use. Size wise they both fit well in my hand and while the cup is slightly smaller than what I consider ideal for making the lather, I do recognize that if it’ been any larger it would been awkward to hold. Like most things in life it’s all about compromises, and I can easily live with a slightly smaller bowl since I tend to face lather.
I’ll write up a separate review on the lather cup and the shavette soon; the cup simply deserves it’s own piece and the shavette I’ll have to get comfortable about using first as I’ve never used one before.
If you’re not expecting it a black soap can be slightly unsettling…. but that is just the charcoal. Activated charcoal has been used for ages to clean and detox; my favourite facial scrub have activated charcoal, my air purifier have an activated charcoal filter, as do my military issue respirator. For those who worry that it’ll turn your face black, rest assured that it lathers almost white as any other soap.
Apart from the charcoal there is nothing in the soap one would not expect to find in shaving soap. The scent of the soap is very pleasant; a fairly complex but light flower scent that passed muster with my Better Half with flying colours. I found some suggestions online that the scent could be improved, but I’m inclined to disagree – to my nose it’s fine as it is.
So how does it shave? That is the question that really matters when it comes to a shave soap, is it not?
The first shave was – and this is a good thing – blissfully normal. The lather has a ever so slightly grey tint from the charcoal, and the scent loosened up a bit and embraced me as I was removing my stubble. Facial feel wasn’t too dissimilar to the Cold River Soap Works’ Glide, which is a recent favourite of mine. Since I had bloomed the soap and have fairly soft water, about half a minute of loading was plenty enough for two passes and lather left over.

The post shave feel of the first shave was also a good one, with no noticeable drying out of my skin. As a side note the floral scent of the Pereira works very well with the Proraso Wood & Spices.

Further shaves reinforced the positive first impression, even more so after tweaking the ratio of water to soap. The Pereira Shavery shaving cream has ever so slightly less cushion than the CRSW Glide, but is also slicker. It’s a fairly thirsty cream in my opinion, much in the same way I find that Mike’s Natural to be a thirsty soap. Post shave feel continued to be good, and while I’m not sure if the activated charcoal did any good it certainly didn’t do any harm.

A quick summary of my findings and opinions:

  • Presentation: From the wooden box through the decoration on the container to the look of the soap was all top notch.
  • Scent: Complex without being overpowering, floral and embracing. Opens up significantly when lathered.
  • Latherability: A little tricky getting the ratio of water just right, but once dialed in it is thick, fluffy and smooth.
  • Slickness: Among the slickest soaps I’ve shaved with, nothing more to add there.
  • Cushion: Not quite as cushioning as some of my soaps, but on par with Mike’s and better than many other commercial and artisan offerings.
  • Post shave feel: Didn’t dry my skin out, and didn’t leave a greasy feel either – just a clean feeling after my shave.

Do I consider the Pereira Shavery Shaving Cream with Activated Charcoal a good shaving soap? Indeed I do, one of the best I’ve tried so far.
Would I buy this soap with my own money? Most assuredly, if I can find a place to order it.
Can I recommend this soap to others? Most assuredly if they can find it, it’s simply a very good soap that I feel most people can enjoy.

Through a friend on the Shave Nook I’ve learned – later confirmed by Pereira – that this soap comes in four different form of packaging; The version with the ceramic container and shave bowl that I received, a version of just the ceramic bowl, an aluminium container, and a recent addition is a plastic container mimicking the ceramic one (but probably much lighter in weight).

Personally I feel that a refill puck could be a nice addition to the range, for placing in a ceramic bowl when empty – the bowl is simply too nice to throw away.

So far I’ve not been able to locate an online seller of this soap and related products, as best I can tell based on a post I found at a Portuguese shave forum and on Pereira Shavery’s website they are sold at a few physical stores in Lisbon and Porto. Hopefully this will change sooner rather than later – at least before I run out of this soap – since travelling to Portugal for a refill would be inconvenient at best.

On PereiraShavery.com they say that their soap will be available at Amazon UK “soon”, but I do hope that more specialised online shave shops will start carrying too, since I prefer spending my money with the smaller niche stores for my shaving needs. In the meantime Pereira Shavery informed me that interested shavers can contact them directly via the email on their website to order direct from the source – and if you do that before the 31th May 2018 and use the code WW10% they will give you a 10% discount. More details on the discount in another post.

Listed ingredients of the soap is: Aqua, Propylene Glycol, Sodium Stearate, Sodium Laureth Sulfate, Glycerin, Sorbitol, Sodium Cocoate, Sodium Xylenesullonate, Sodium Lauryl Sulfate, Stearic Acid, Kaolin, Charcoal Powder, Tetrasodlum EDTA, Tetrasodium Etidronate, Parfum, Lanolin, Castor Seed Oil, Benzyl sallcylate, Cournarin, Citronellol, Linalool, Butylphenyl, Methylpropional, Hexyl Cinnamal, and titanium dioxide.

Shave of the day 9th May

Razor: Schick “Lady Eversharp”
Blade: Schick Injector
Brush: Vie-Long #14033
Lather: Mike’s Natural Soaps Peppermint & Rosemary
Aftershave: Myrsol Aqua Balsamica
Additional Care: Alum Block & Scotch Porter Beard Balm

VE day

Today is VE day. Victory Europe day; the day the Third Reich formally surrendered to the Allies, thus ending the Second World War in Europe.

In Norway it also known as Liberation Day; the day the occupying Germans figured out that fighting to the last man in Festung Norwegen to appease a dead dictator was – to be blunt – kinda stupid, and decided to surrender to the Norwegian Resistance instead.

May 8th is also Veterans Day in Norway where we honour those who fought not just in the War with a capital W, but also those who served abroad on peace keeping and peace creating missions… and given the fact that the world seems to constantly balance on the edge of a knife, there are quite a few of those.

For those of us who still serve, and those who did their duty then and now, it can be an emotional day. Our forefathers fought – and sometimes fell – to give us our freedom. We owe it to others to do the same.

Male facial shaving – or “how not to be asphyxiated by poison gas”

Today is VE day, so even if the story originated in the Great War and not the Second it’s oddly suitable.
World War One, known at the time as the Great War or the War to end all Wars (yeah, right…) was the first war when clean shaved faces were required. The reason was twofold; personal hygiene in the trenches, and ensuring a proper gas tight seal on the respirators. Up until chemical warfare became an issue, facial hair was often encouraged and sometimes required since follicular fashion statement was all about virility and aggression,* which was seen as good military qualities.  British regulations from 1860 to 1916 stated that:

The hair of the head will be kept short. The chin and the under lip will be shaved, but not the upper lip…

So yeah.. shame on you if you couldn’t grow a decent moustache I guess.
Anyhow, I digress… so such was the state of affairs up until the first couple of years into the Great War. On 22 April 1915 the Germans released a huge cloud of chlorine near Yrpes. Cue a rapid development of respirators – starting with simple pads tied in front of the mouth and ending with models that almost be mistaken for modern ones – and the end of facial hair. When the US got ready to get involved in the tussle, the US Army regulations stated that beards were not permitted, and the maximum allowable hair length was one inch. King Gillette got the job of making sure every member of the American Expeditionary Forces was clean shaven.. and the rest is history.

To summarize: This:

means you have to use these:

and that means you’ll need something like this:

which in turns leads to this:

which lead to a whole generation of young men learning to shave themselves and getting used to being clean shaven every day. And that is where we are today… beards come and go, but shaving is here to stay.

*) Same reason men in many non-western parts of the world is expected to have a full beard as soon as they are of age – they are quite literally seen as less manly without it.

Shave of the day 7th May

Razor: Schick “Lady Eversharp”
Blade: Schick Injector
Brush: Wilkinson Sword Badger
Lather: Asylum Shave Works Frankincense & Myrrh
Aftershave: Asylum Shave Works Frankincense & Myrrh
Additional Care: Alum Block & BullDog Original Beard Balm

Shave of the day 4th May

Razor: Schick “Lady Eversharp” & Pereira Shavery shavette
Blade: Schick Injector & Shark Super Chrome
Brush: Vie-Long #13051M
Lather: Pereira Shavery Shaving Cream w/ Activated Charcoal
Aftershave: Nivea Cooling After Shave Balm
Additional Care: Alum Block & BullDog Original Beard Oil