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WEEKLY SHAVING SOAP REVIEW

I'm not a fan of cream shaving soaps, cream attend to clog up my razors, and my bathroom sink drain over time, if, you don't flush them out with hot boiling water from time to time.

SANTA MARIA NOVELLA – CREMA DE BARBA​


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First Look - A white plastic container with green text on it reminiscent of the vintage ones that housed a moisturizing skin cream or an all-purpose ointment the entire family used. A bit under whelming packaging for a pricey shaving cream from a high end brand if you ask me but it still deserves a few points for its originality.

Side note – Santa Maria Novella fragrances is regarded as the world’s oldest apothecary with its roots being traced back to the year 1221 when newly arrived Dominican friars in Florence and set up shop at Santa Maria Inter Vineas, a small church just outside of the city walls. Using herbs and flowers growing in the monastic garden, the friars made soothing balms and remedies to serve the local community. In the 16th century perfumer Renato Bianco raised by the Friars designed a fragrance for Catherine de’ Medici who was to marry Henry II of Valois, it was the first perfume to use an alcohol base instead of the traditional vinegar or olive oil. Acclaimed as the first modern perfume, it is still sold today as the Acqua Della Regina (“The Water of the Queen”). Over 400 years the Italian fragrance house has evolved into a top shelf brand with numerous fragrances, bath and grooming products. The Monks may no longer be a part of it but their formulas and dedication to using the finest ingredients is still maintained.

First Whiff – Santa Maria Novella Crema da Barba features notes of menthol, eucalyptus and Tabacco Toscano cologne, there are no layers of multiple scent notes but just three players in the field. At first whiff I get a hint of menthol followed by a stronger eucalyptus note, a second whiff and that Tabacco Toscano cologne comes through. The scent is refreshing and fairly invigorating with a masculine persona. Unlike some tobacco fragrances this one is refined, delicate and at the most a little above mid strength. Tobacco Toscano cologne is an SMN creation and was created around Manifattura di Lucca's iconic Tuscan cigar with oriental woody notes and smoky vanilla thrown into the blend, I have the cologne and am a huge fan of it. The soap comes across as a lighter and slightly mentholated version of it and is very plesant.

First Lather – Impressed by the fragrance I was eager to see if the lather matched up to it. The list of ingredients include water, stearic acid, coconut oil, potassium hydroxide, glycerin, cetearyl alcohol, sodium hydroxide, eucalyptus globulus leaf oil, fragrance, camphor, menthol, and allantoin. Using my damp omega Boar brush and a teaspoon of soap smeared across my cheeks, I proceeded to face lather painting multiple strokes for over a minute before splaying the brush for a good scrub. The result was a thick pasty cream on my cheeks and neck, adding a few drops of water I continued with the brush strokes and a scrub for a minute more, the lather was still thick and low structure. Another fifteen drops of water and a minute more of face lathering followed. I still wasn't happy with the result and added ten more water drops to my brush, thirty seconds later and I had a nice creamy and luxurious lather, not dense but very satisfying. It is easy to whip up a great lather with SMN Crema De Barba but unlike what other shavers boast of, this is a thirsty soap and requires a decent amount of hydration. To be fair, bowl lathering would definitely work better for this product.
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First Performance – Pleasant fragrance, impressive lather and it was over to the performance. Using my Blackbird with a Wizamet I found the first pass to be decent, the lather helped the razor glide easily over a five day growth but there was something missing. I put that down to my high expectations of the product and proceeded with the second pass to finish with a BBS. There wasn’t too much residual slickness but the product did its job of aiding a fairly smooth shave. The residual slickness was a little above average and then it hit me, what was missing was the level of cushion and protection that so many top shelf brands offer. The cushion and protection were there but at the most it was average for me. SMN Crema De Barba receives high praise for its post shave feel from tons of wet shavers but for me personally, it failed to hold a candle to brands like Barrister & Mann, Zingari Man, Saponificio Varesino and Officna Artigiana to name a few. This shaving cream needs a post shave routine for sure.

First Opinion – Being my first shaving cream review and with all the high praise Santa Maria Novella Crema De Barba receives from its fans, I really wanted to like it but it was just about average for me. While I loved the Tobacco Toscano fragrance, it could have been a bit stronger. The actual performance of the product was a bit of a let-down , it did its job alright but then so many cheaper alternatives would as well. Being a 220 ml pour and with a minimal amount needed for every shave, It is a misconception that it is an over priced product but I can’t see myself going through a tub of it without getting bored before one third was done. You can wisely split the quantity and price with a fellow shaver to experience it, but for me a Proraso green tube would deliver a similar performance at a fraction of the cost without the mild hint of tobacco in it, and I could live with that.

Cover Art Work – 5 / 10

Lather Quality – 8 / 10

Fragrance – 7 / 10

Cushion & Protection – 6 / 10

Slickness – 7 / 10

Post Shave Feel – 6 / 10

Value – 10 / 10

Total Point Score – 49 / 70

Availabilityhttps://noah.com.au , https://au.smnovella.com , https://www.libertineparfumerie.com.au and other online retailers.
Great review @Bladerunner7 and a history lesson to boot🤣
On a more humorous note would that make the origins of this soap older than the fabled Yardley?🤣🤣🤣
looking forward to your next review
cheers.
 
I'm not a fan of cream shaving soaps, cream attend to clog up my razors, and my bathroom sink drain over time, if, you don't flush them out with hot boiling water from time to time.
Of course you are 100% entitled to your opinion
@SpeedyPC
I myself have tried quite a range of hard and soft soaps and shaving creams over the years. Just curious to know which soft creams are clogging up your razors and your drains.
As I have never had this experience.
Can you provide some examples of the shaving creams that clog your razors and the type and brand of the razors that you have that are clogging up when you used soft shaving cream?
I’m curious to know.
Cheers.
 
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Of course you are 100% entitled to your opinion
@SpeedyPC
I myself have tried quite a range of hard and soft soaps and shaving creams over the years. Just curious to know which soft creams are clogging up your razors and your drains.
As I have never had this experience.
Can you provide some examples of the shaving creams that clog your razors and the type and brand of the razors that you have that are clogging up when you used soft shaving cream?
I’m curious to know.
Cheers.
I don't know about Speedy's experience, but I've found Proraso leaves (or rather, left) a cloudy deposit on my razors. But a lot of this depends on what kind of water you have. At home, I'm fortunate to have pure mountain rainwater, but travelling interstate can be problematic with even the best soaps, especially where water is heavily chlorinated.

None of my soaps have ever given any problem with the drains.
 
I don't know about Speedy's experience, but I've found Proraso leaves (or rather, left) a cloudy deposit on my razors. But a lot of this depends on what kind of water you have. At home, I'm fortunate to have pure mountain rainwater, but travelling interstate can be problematic with even the best soaps, especially where water is heavily chlorinated.

None of my soaps have ever given any problem with the drains.
Hi @Gargravarr if you’re referring to Proraso Green
That’s probably your dissolved skin sticking to the razor. 😂

🍻
 
:LOL: Never tried that one, I had the white tub "Green Tea and Oatmeal". I don't remember it smelling like any of those, but it was OK, got the job done. But it did leave a white deposit on my hardware.
That was the fist soap I started my DE Shaving journey with. Used up half the tub before moving it on to another newbie shaver then. It had a refreshing pleasant smell but unlike the Proraso shaving cream which is superb I always found the soap to be a bit odd. It would dry up on the face too during the shave.

I only have the Azure Lime, Cypress and Vetiver, Green and Blue tubes now and they are amazing to use with no issues of clogging whatsoever.
 
BEARD & BLADE - SANDALWOOD SHAVING CREAM

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First Look
- A simple jar with the type of shaving cream on the label front, instructions to use the soap on the side and the brand name on the lid, nothing extraordinary but it gets the job of conveying what's inside. Having said all that, I still like the presentation of the product much as it looks classy enough for me.

Side note – Best mates Michael and Ben shared a passion for wet shaving and with an aim to providing fellow Australians with grooming products set up the Shaver Hut in 2007. From a humble business it grew into the now popular Beard and Blade. Today B&B also sell their own line of men’s grooming products and is rated very high for their customer service

First Whiff – Lavender and Sandalwood remain the two titans of the fragrances used in shaving products, the question of who is more popular or bigger than the other has yet to be settled. While I love the many shaving soaps that feature sandalwood or lavender blended with other essential oils, there are days when just one of them alone puts a smile on my face. At first whiff, the Beard & Blade Sandalwood shaving soap gave off a pleasant woody scent, it was fairly mid strength and calming in a way. At second whiff, the scent strength seemed to increase a bit with that powdery dry down which sandalwood is famous for, coming through. It reminded me a bit of the TOBS Sandalwood shaving cream but was more natural in its projection and scent. I discovered that this soap was manufactured in the same facility as a lot of other British shaving soaps, probably the same place that Taylor of Old Bond Street is made, yet the B&B Sandalwood was a lot nicer. A look at the fragrance profile of both soaps made it very clear, while the Australian Brand’s offering has only Sandalwood named, TOBS has 4 top notes, 3 middle notes and 8 base notes in its product, too complex for my liking. Keeping it simple does make the Beard and Blade product a winner for me. I couldn’t confirm where the Sandalwood was sourced from but it did smell a lot like Indian sandalwood which is the more robust and strong variety . Sir Henry’s use Australian Sandalwood which tends to be lighter and more subtle as compared to tits Indian counterpart. I love both.

First Lather – Pleased with the fragrance, it was time to check out the lather quality. I find myself using my Beard and Blade Chubby Nebular synthetic often nowadays due to its stellar performance and I couldn’t find a better match for a shaving soap by the same brand. Made in the Isle of Man by Progress Vulfix, the little brush with its generous 28 mm dense knot is a lather creating monster and am thankful to @Vittoria for introducing it to me. A teaspoon of the product with two tablespoons of water in my Hendrix Classics & Co SS Bowl saw a nice airy lather form in a minute. A few more drops of water and 90 seconds of brush swirling was enough to produce a fairly dense and thick lather which had excellent form and structure. This is an easy shaving cream to work with and face lathering shavers would love it too. Having said that I would recommend scooping out the soap or bowl lathering over Brush loading it.

IMG-20250605-145045.jpg
IMG-20250605-145242.jpg


First Performance – TOBS Sandalwood was one of the first soaps I ever used in my DE Wet Shaving journey. It always delivered the goods but left me with inflamed skin post shave, probably due to one of the essential oils or synthetic fragrances used in it. So I was a bit apprehensive when painting the first few strokes of the B&B Sversion on my face. Surprisingly, It felt very comfortable as if a light moisturizer had been applied to my skin. I had an excellent first pass with the Blackland Dart and a Feather blade, the soap provided an ample amount of cushion and protection with just enough residual slickness. The second pass was a breeze as well with the lather maintaining its form and consistency through the shave. Ironically almost all the ingredients used in TOBS Sandalwood are present in this soap with a few added ones throw in. I also figured why the Beard & blade soap worked well for me minus any skin irritation. While TOBS uses Parfum in their ingredient listing, B&B use Santalum Album or Sandalwood oil. Pure Sandalwood extract in powder or oil form has been revered for centuries for its anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antimicrobial properties. It’s funny how a small change in ingredients can make such a huge difference.

First Opinion – Beard & Blade’s Sandalwood Shaving cream comes in a 100 g jar and while it isn’t on par with some of the top tier brands, it is a product that far exceeded my expectations. The cushion, protection and glide provided was very good and even though the fragrance was mid strength, it was very pleasant. A little goes a long way and at its price point it is very good value. If I had to reach for a Sandalwood Shaving soap, Sir Henry’s would be my pick but if it was a Sandalwood shaving cream and a mindless shave that I desired when stuck for time, B&B Sandalwood would be the one. Highly recommended

Cover Art Work – 6 / 10

Lather Quality – 8 / 10

Fragrance – 7 / 10

Cushion & Protection – 8 / 10

Slickness – 7 / 10

Post Shave Feel – 8 / 10

Value – 10 / 10

Total Point Score – 54 / 70

Availabilityhttps://www.beardandblade.com.au/products/beard-blade-sandalwood-shaving-cream-100g
 
BEARD & BLADE - SANDALWOOD SHAVING CREAM

IMG-20250605-144729.jpg
IMG-20250605-144854.jpg


First Look
- A simple jar with the type of shaving cream on the label front, instructions to use the soap on the side and the brand name on the lid, nothing extraordinary but it gets the job of conveying what's inside. Having said all that, I still like the presentation of the product much as it looks classy enough for me.

Side note – Best mates Michael and Ben shared a passion for wet shaving and with an aim to providing fellow Australians with grooming products set up the Shaver Hut in 2007. From a humble business it grew into the now popular Beard and Blade. Today B&B also sell their own line of men’s grooming products and is rated very high for their customer service

First Whiff – Lavender and Sandalwood remain the two titans of the fragrances used in shaving products, the question of who is more popular or bigger than the other has yet to be settled. While I love the many shaving soaps that feature sandalwood or lavender blended with other essential oils, there are days when just one of them alone puts a smile on my face. At first whiff, the Beard & Blade Sandalwood shaving soap gave off a pleasant woody scent, it was fairly mid strength and calming in a way. At second whiff, the scent strength seemed to increase a bit with that powdery dry down which sandalwood is famous for, coming through. It reminded me a bit of the TOBS Sandalwood shaving cream but was more natural in its projection and scent. I discovered that this soap was manufactured in the same facility as a lot of other British shaving soaps, probably the same place that Taylor of Old Bond Street is made, yet the B&B Sandalwood was a lot nicer. A look at the fragrance profile of both soaps made it very clear, while the Australian Brand’s offering has only Sandalwood named, TOBS has 4 top notes, 3 middle notes and 8 base notes in its product, too complex for my liking. Keeping it simple does make the Beard and Blade product a winner for me. I couldn’t confirm where the Sandalwood was sourced from but it did smell a lot like Indian sandalwood which is the more robust and strong variety . Sir Henry’s use Australian Sandalwood which tends to be lighter and more subtle as compared to tits Indian counterpart. I love both.

First Lather – Pleased with the fragrance, it was time to check out the lather quality. I find myself using my Beard and Blade Chubby Nebular synthetic often nowadays due to its stellar performance and I couldn’t find a better match for a shaving soap by the same brand. Made in the Isle of Man by Progress Vulfix, the little brush with its generous 28 mm dense knot is a lather creating monster and am thankful to @Vittoria for introducing it to me. A teaspoon of the product with two tablespoons of water in my Hendrix Classics & Co SS Bowl saw a nice airy lather form in a minute. A few more drops of water and 90 seconds of brush swirling was enough to produce a fairly dense and thick lather which had excellent form and structure. This is an easy shaving cream to work with and face lathering shavers would love it too. Having said that I would recommend scooping out the soap or bowl lathering over Brush loading it.

IMG-20250605-145045.jpg
IMG-20250605-145242.jpg


First Performance – TOBS Sandalwood was one of the first soaps I ever used in my DE Wet Shaving journey. It always delivered the goods but left me with inflamed skin post shave, probably due to one of the essential oils or synthetic fragrances used in it. So I was a bit apprehensive when painting the first few strokes of the B&B Sversion on my face. Surprisingly, It felt very comfortable as if a light moisturizer had been applied to my skin. I had an excellent first pass with the Blackland Dart and a Feather blade, the soap provided an ample amount of cushion and protection with just enough residual slickness. The second pass was a breeze as well with the lather maintaining its form and consistency through the shave. Ironically almost all the ingredients used in TOBS Sandalwood are present in this soap with a few added ones throw in. I also figured why the Beard & blade soap worked well for me minus any skin irritation. While TOBS uses Parfum in their ingredient listing, B&B use Santalum Album or Sandalwood oil. Pure Sandalwood extract in powder or oil form has been revered for centuries for its anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antimicrobial properties. It’s funny how a small change in ingredients can make such a huge difference.

First Opinion – Beard & Blade’s Sandalwood Shaving cream comes in a 100 g jar and while it isn’t on par with some of the top tier brands, it is a product that far exceeded my expectations. The cushion, protection and glide provided was very good and even though the fragrance was mid strength, it was very pleasant. A little goes a long way and at its price point it is very good value. If I had to reach for a Sandalwood Shaving soap, Sir Henry’s would be my pick but if it was a Sandalwood shaving cream and a mindless shave that I desired when stuck for time, B&B Sandalwood would be the one. Highly recommended

Cover Art Work – 6 / 10

Lather Quality – 8 / 10

Fragrance – 7 / 10

Cushion & Protection – 8 / 10

Slickness – 7 / 10

Post Shave Feel – 8 / 10

Value – 10 / 10

Total Point Score – 54 / 70

Availabilityhttps://www.beardandblade.com.au/products/beard-blade-sandalwood-shaving-cream-100g
It’s just another bloody shaving cream :sleep:
 
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