scotsman
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 17, 2014
- Messages
- 202
- Reaction score
- 139
I recently obtained my first commercial client. They own a pair of high-end salon/spas and were sufficiently impressed with my soap that they now want to stock it on their shelves and are willing to buy it wholesale from me at almost my retail price. The only caveat is that they want the front of the packaging labeled with their company's logo, with my company's logo and info on the back of the packaging. Totally doable, especially since they have no issues about me stamping my company's logo directly on the bar of soap. They plan to significantly mark up the price of the soaps as they have an extremely wealthy clientele that won't bat an eye at paying $9 or more per bar. My quandary is that I'm trying to come up with ideas for luxury, spa-quality soaps I can make test batches of and pitch to them that will be sufficiently luxurious as to justify the incredibly high price point they will be charging and will appeal to their wealthy clientele. Anybody have any ideas? I'm already kicking around some salt bar ideas and just did up another test batch last night with some higher-end ingredients like silk. I was thinking of maybe adding some luxury oils like argan or emu. Does anybody have experience using the luxury oils in cp soap? Which ones would retain noticeable benefits in the finished product? I don't want to dump a bunch of luxury oils into soap for label appeal alone. I want them to at least provide some benefit and from my research there seems to be two schools of thought. The first is that many of these luxury oils do little to nothing in cp soap because their beneficial properties are essentially nullified during saponification and really only provide noticeable results in leave-on treatments(which are not an option for me). The second school of thought is that they do retain beneficial qualities in cp...especially emu oil. What do you guys think?