I am a big fan of Ted Baker and Molton Brown.

  • Atemu
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    2 years ago

    I don’t use deodeorant, I use a generic antitranspirant. It prevents sweating but you don’t stink of …whatever the fuck those super artificial “manly” smells are supposed to be.

    • Baron Von J
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      82 years ago

      Antitranspirant? 🤣

      I went the other way and use non-antiperspirant deodorant, once I learned the anti-perspirant is aluminum flakes that cause an allergic swelling to close up your sweat glands (at least it explained all the glitter stains in the armpits of my shirts).

      • Atemu
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        152 years ago

        Oh, curious. They are called “Antitranspirant” in German.

        Latin words are almost always 1:1 the same in German and English (modulo suffix) and this appears to be derived from latin too, so I had assumed it’d be the same but, in this specific case, it’s not.

    • @Sadbutdru@sopuli.xyz
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      32 years ago

      Even with soap I need to look hard for ones without damn foaming agents like SLS (which are literally irritants to skin). But at least you don’t have all the plastic waste that shower gels involve. Shampoo and conditioner are available as bars too, for people who use those.

      • @makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml
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        22 years ago

        Use a shampoo bar also. Same reason. No plastics.

        How many micro particles of plastic do you think are in 1 bottle of shampoo? 1 million? I have no idea, but I’m not going there.

  • @TheColonel@reddthat.com
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    2 years ago

    Old Spice.

    Both the plain, beautiful blue Fresh variety.

    Both feel clean and smell fresh.

    I have very sensitive skin.

    I will pitch an apoplectic fit if they ever discontinue it.

    YOU HEAR ME, OLD SPICE!? NO ONE NEEDS WOLFSBANE OR WHATEVER OTHER SHIT YOU’RE PEDDLING.

  • @HipsterTenZero@dormi.zone
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    2 years ago

    I just use liquid dr bonners, dude writes some unhinged stuff on his bottles but its nice soap. I usually dont like scented soaps, but i am a fan of the peppermint version.

    I dont really care about what antipersperant i use, but i tend to avoid ones marketed as “FOR MEN, CHARCOAL SWEAT AND ALPINE” Etc etc.

  • Chris
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    82 years ago

    The most girly ones I can find. Anything marketed as “for men” with no actual scent described is a big warning sign to avoid. I imagine they are “Engine oil and Swarfega” or “Sawdust and petrol” or other stereotypical alpha male aromas.

  • @astanix@lemmy.world
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    82 years ago

    I use dove bar soap, anything else I’ve tried makes my skin feel weird.

    For deodorant, I use degree.

    • @Sadbutdru@sopuli.xyz
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      22 years ago

      Makes your skin feel weird how? When I was a kid I hated washing my hands because they felt ‘squeaky’ clean after, and it was uncomfortable to let my fingers touch each other. I’ve since figured out that my skin was irritated by the foaming agents in liquid soap (and most bar soap these days). Dove bars are better because they have moisturiser in them, but they are not true soap and still have foaming agents and stuff. You might find a true soap without things would feel good to you too. Searching for ‘SLS-free’ is a good place to start if you’re interested.

  • @SecretPancake@feddit.de
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    62 years ago

    I use different varieties of shower gel from Kneipp mostly. It’s a German brand. I like the smell and consistency. But I sometimes try out other brands.

  • claycle
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    2 years ago

    Soap: a bar of unscented oatmeal-based soap

    For deodorant: I have had very good experience with “Thai stone” style salt-based deodorants. These work simply by making your skin inhospitable to odor-causing bacteria while not causing you irritations. You need to apply it liberally (after slightly wetting the stone, I just count out 8 strokes under each arm), but a single stone will last you … a very long time … and it does really work for a whole day. It has no scent, per se, so you will just smell like you smell without the sulfurous bad smells caused by BO bacteria.

    Or so I gather…

    • Piecemakers
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      32 years ago

      No judgement, here. In my experience, the latter has led to the widespread use of patchouli by those who believe in salting their pits, and that’s not much of a vote of confidence in its efficacy.

  • @TheBananaKing@lemmy.world
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    52 years ago

    Soap, generally nice smelling stuff, like those fancy Italian bath soaps in olive/cypress/fig/etc. Shower gel never seems to cut through oil or rinse off sufficiently for my liking, it always feels faintly icky afterwards.

    I have to use antiperspirant; I sweat like a freaking horse for no good reason. Generally whatever’s on sale, but Brut have a new gender-neutral range that doesn’t smell like a high school locker room, which is a nice change.

  • Digital Mark
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    52 years ago

    Actual soap, Lever 2000 boring odor, a bar lasts quite a while even with hard scrubbing. Shower gel is weird and wasteful, you have water right there in the shower.

    I have some deodorant thing but it’s unscented, just for the antiperspirant.

  • assplode
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    52 years ago

    Kirkland Citrus body wash and Mitchum unscented antiperspirant.

    I’m a sweaty mofo and need the strong stuff.

    • @JillyB@beehaw.org
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      12 years ago

      I’m this way with body wash. However with deodorant, I use a Japanese deodorant. I lived in Japan for a while, got used to it, and now American deodorants kind of hurt. I import it now. When I was working for a Japanese company, I’d have colleagues bring big boxes of it to re-up.

  • plague-sapiens
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    2 years ago

    Cheapest shower gel I can find, cause none of the smell remains on my body (long and hot showers help against my infuriating back pain better than most painkillers). Nivea roll-on (without Al-salts).