Brissles
Registered Shopper
In case you didn't know, you can rub the cheapest soap on to a nylon bath 'sponge' and you'll always get a "rich and creamy foam. So don't take us for fools with the demos of expensive products lathering up.
What's the name of the factory?When I was a kid we lived very near to a soap factory. At certain times of the day a large cloud of steam would escape from the factory chimney and the whole area smelled wonderful. The factory still works to this day and each soap is handmade, hand polished and packaged by hand. Much of the machinery is the original from when the factory was first opened here in the 1930s, nothing is automated, the soap is mixed by hand and most of the staff have been there for years and have followed their parents into the job. They do a guided tour of the mill and nowadays they still make their original products but they also make soaps for several companies.
I follow their facebook page and they regularly show items from their soap archive and old ledgers, special orders, other old paperwork etc all beautifully written in longhand by fountain pen and ink and they show old soaps they no longer make plus soaps they sent abroad to America, Russia and Germany. They also have a website which tells their history and other facts and I walked past their factory almost everyday as a child I hope they manage to stay there forever because they were and still are a big part of the local community. The Speaker Of the House, Lyndsay Hoyle was born and bred within spitting distance of the factory and he commissioned special soaps for the Houses Of Parliament plus arranged a guided tour for visiting leaders from abroad.
I find soap fascinating because its such a simple, taken for granted product but has played such a big part in lives, from the hard soap sent to soldiers in WW1 to help them combat body lice and fleas, to Florence Nightingale who was the fore runner of hand hygiene in medicine, to the hard blocks my Mother scrubbed my Dad`s shirt collars with, to the baby soap I washed my first baby in nearly 50 years ago, the bars of soap I found hidden in my Mum`s dressing table drawers after she died which she used to make her hankies, underwear and stockings smell nice, the matching soaps and bath cubes I cherished as a young teenager when I was lucky enough to get them for Christmas and the special expensive bar of Chanel no 5 soap I saved for and bought for my wedding day in 1973 and so on.
It`s Droyt factory in Chorley Lancashire.What's the name of the factory?
Ahh thank you for posting this - wondered if it was Droyt, as I’m from near that area and my mum and dad still live relatively close by…It`s Droyt factory in Chorley Lancashire.
Virtual Factory Tour – Droyt Products
droyt.com
Could never use that alcohol filled liquid. Can you imagine the damage done breaking down the skin with the harsh ingredients? Would make you skin even more prone to all infections through cracking and burning.Through the pandemic I used just Pears Soap to wash hands etc - didn’t buy hand sanitizer type of products etc and am still alive …
I used to love the smell of that. It's not something I'd have bought for myself as I wasn't a sweaty Betty but one day when me and my schoolfriend were out shopping and there was this bloke asking people into a hall to do market research and the product was Shield, we had to sit through an advert, fill in a questionnaire and everyone was given a bar to take home, so I used to buy it regularly 'cause it smelled so fresh. I seem to remember a lemon version coming out to which I liked.And I've just remembered Shield, which was supposedly a deodorant soap.
I can't speak for all Italians, of course, but in my experience, they demand highly scented bath products. I can't deny that it's nice to walk behind a man or a woman and take in a gentle waft of soap or cologne.I used to love the smell of that. It's not something I'd have bought for myself as I wasn't a sweaty Betty but one day when me and my schoolfriend were out shopping and there was this bloke asking people into a hall to do market research and the product was Shield, we had to sit through an advert, fill in a questionnaire and everyone was given a bar to take home, so I used to buy it regularly 'cause it smelled so fresh. I seem to remember a lemon version coming out to which I liked.
Nicest smelling soap I've ever had was a bar of Palmolive that I bought in Italy, it smelled completely different to the Palmolive you could buy here, it smelled like a posh perfume. I was kicking myself for only buying one bar!
And I've just remembered Shield, which was supposedly a deodorant soap.
Remember all of those, as a teenager I used to massage Camay into my skin, it was the cold cream! Now @ 76 I have few wrinkles!shall I put it down to Camay?! I do use the L’Occitanne soaps, they last ages so although expensive are quite economical in the long run?Back in the day Imperial leather was as posh as it got in my house, failing that it was Lux and my nan always bought Camay there was none of this posh French stuff. At Christmas we might receive a box of Bronnley Lemon shaped soap or one of Marks n' sparks's soap in a box usually peach or Iris - lovely!!!
Sheild was green with bluish streaks through it. I think they brought out a few variations as the brand embedded - yellow and maybe pink too.Was Shield green?
I remember my Grandma bathing and washing with Fairy Household Soap - the dark green stuff in huge bars - she refused to buy two different sorts of soap, one for washing and one for household chores. If it was good enough to scrub the sink, it was good enough to get rid of her Rimmel Powder and Lipstick...