Steve Maskery
Established Member
In ye olden days, when I were a lad, well a student, anyway, Boots used to do factory tours. You could book a trip, free, and come home with a doggy bag of bootsy stuff. Shampoo, soap, toothpaste etc. They don't do that anymore.
Boots also had their own soap factory, before we all started using liquid soap. The soap factory has gone, too.
But I do remember seeing a soap press that made the shell-shaped shaving soap. The operator put in an ordinary bar of soap, pulled the handle and out came the clamshell soap. Same soap.
And talking of Boots soap - they had umpteen moulds for bars of soap. Each mould had a blank plug which could be replaced with the logo of whichever brand the soap was being made for. Palmolive, Cussons, that sort of thing. Some of the moulds were novelties, like teddy bears or ducks.
One day I was approached to make resin display models for each of these moulds, and a display cabinet to house them in. I can't remember what I quoted, but I do remember realising afterwards that I had been paid a pittance. There were a few dozen of them.
The reason they outsourced it, apparently, was that the resin was supposed to be handled in a fume cupboard and so it would fail H&S. But it was OK for me to do it in my kitchen.
Boots also had their own soap factory, before we all started using liquid soap. The soap factory has gone, too.
But I do remember seeing a soap press that made the shell-shaped shaving soap. The operator put in an ordinary bar of soap, pulled the handle and out came the clamshell soap. Same soap.
And talking of Boots soap - they had umpteen moulds for bars of soap. Each mould had a blank plug which could be replaced with the logo of whichever brand the soap was being made for. Palmolive, Cussons, that sort of thing. Some of the moulds were novelties, like teddy bears or ducks.
One day I was approached to make resin display models for each of these moulds, and a display cabinet to house them in. I can't remember what I quoted, but I do remember realising afterwards that I had been paid a pittance. There were a few dozen of them.
The reason they outsourced it, apparently, was that the resin was supposed to be handled in a fume cupboard and so it would fail H&S. But it was OK for me to do it in my kitchen.