Why a Beautiful Bar of Soap Is a Simple Luxury During Self Quarantine

My dad is a simple man with but one indulgence: a beautiful bar of soap. I never fully understood why this was his luxury of his choice and the only thing he ever asked for when my family was stuck on what to gift him. At least not until self-quarantine, when my daily shower took on a new significance, transformed into a serene act of self-care that I came to cherish at the end of the day. When for no particular reason I traded in my body wash for a humble bar of soap that’d been, no exaggeration, gathering dust on the shelf, my perspective shifted. As I savored each sudsy stroke of the weighty bar, it gave me a more palpable and tactile relationship to cleansing. Since then, I’ve kept returning to it as a vehicle for a cathartic ritual of sorts. I’ve also Kondo’d my shower shelf to let my new Etsy-procurred vintage soap dish shine.

“A good bar soap is the minimalist’s dream,” says Andrew Goetz, co-founder of Malin+Goetz, who has always been partial to soap in solid form. “Not only do I like the act of picking up a bar of soap to wash; it always feels so nice and thorough between my hands, and I like that the bar literally washes itself clean when you rinse it under water.” He also appreciates that you know exactly where you stand with a bar of soap, whereas with a bottle of body wash or gel, you’re often left pumping it in frustration, trying to squeeze out every last drop to no avail. “Did I mention that a bar soap practically lasts forever?” poses Goetz, emphasizing that, typically, a bar of soap needs to be replaced less often than its alternatives. And it’s a more environmentally-friendly option in more ways than one. “Bar soap wins hands down when it comes to sustainability,” says Alexander Kummerow, who co-founded Herbivore Botanicals with his wife Julia Mills. “They eliminate the need for plastic bottles and pumps, and need only a box to keep it safe on shelves. For every bar soap used, consider it one less bottle in the landfill.”

What’s more: If a bar of soap is infused with fragrance, it will permeate its surroundings to lovely olfactory effect. “When you enter your bathroom, the scent of the soap puts you in a good mood—it can take you somewhere else,” explains Ben Krigler, the fifth generation owner of French parfumerie Krigler, which molds each of their intoxicating soaps into a gallet shape to resemble the pebbles on the beaches of Provence for an objet d’art effect. Taking up minimal space, producing less waste, and supplying a more tangible cleanse, a bar of soap is utilitarian luxury at its finest. “It’s all about the little things that spark joy to help us stay calm during these anxious times,” muses Kummerow. “A bar of soap gives you a moment to indulge and let your stress melt away.”

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