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9 Next-Level Hand Soaps That Might Make You Give Up Your Beloved Aesop

Coming soon to a beautifully lit powder room near you.

9 New Status Hand Soaps Coming for Aesop's Crown Nonfiction, Loewe, Amazon

A few years ago, if you stumbled into the tastefully designed, low-lit bathroom of a restaurant recently added to a “Best Of” list, odds were high that you’d end up washing your hands with an Aesop soap. As a result, you might ask for the brand’s scrub and lotion set as a gift or marvel at the scent in a friend’s kitchen. For a short while, Aesop was the only soap for aesthetes in the know.

While it’s still a wildly popular, undeniably luxurious product, its iron (and vetiver and bergamot) tight grip on the title of “it soap” has loosened. A victim of its own runaway success, it opened the door for a burgeoning market of high-end hand cleansers: not one challenger has arrived to take the throne, but many. You can no longer walk into the bathroom of a flower shop-cum-cafe with absolute certainty of what you will see.

For restauranter Simon Kim, handwashing should be front and center in the dining experience—and he means that literally. Kim worked with designer David Rockwell on the sleek line of sinks that greet guests at his buzzy new Korean fried chicken restaurant Coqodaq in New York City.

“If you’re going to put in a hand washing station, how do you make people enjoy washing their hands?” Kim asked in a recent interview. “We thought, what better way than fancy handsoaps? They’re all different in texture, colors, and scent. It makes it an experience as opposed to a function.��

The hand washing station at Coqodaq in New York City.
The hand washing station at Coqodaq in New York City.

Part of the trend can be attributed to consumers’ ever-expanding eyes. “Even with an incredibly crowded beauty space, people are still excited by newness,” says Kelly Atterton, founder of the skin care brand Rile. “There’s one place people will always try a new product, and that’s in the bathroom when they have to wash their hands.”

We’re seeing more and more spaces, particularly hotels, break away from the big brands and go local for a more custom experience. The Hotel Poseidon in Positano uses a locally sourced lemon soap that celebrates the region’s “Sfusato Amalfitano.” Designer Megan Pflug of the trendy upstate New York getaway The Wood House Lodge also uses exclusive soaps. “We also sourced bath amenities from a local company called Village Common, who did a custom blend of earthy botanical inspired profiles for our toiletry items and hand soaps.”

Kim sees the trend as an indication that restauranteurs want to express their visions through every element they can touch. But he also noted a general shift away from the traditional association of luxury with the grandiose. “I think these small details are very memorable,” he says. “Younger generations really appreciate these smaller things. Softer touches and things that make you feel a little more emotional, a little more experiential.”

If you’re ready for a new experience in your powder room, here are the soaps to try.

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