Exfoliating triple-milled Bar Soap with fragrance notes of Fresh Raspberry, Bluebonnet, and Back Jack.
FRAGRANCE NOTES:
Spirited and gracefull.
Olfactory Family: Fruity Floral Green
NOTES:
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Top Notes: Back Jack, Fresh Raspberry & Pink Pepper
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Mid Notes: Bluebonnet, Freesia, Rose
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Base Notes: Amber, Cedarwood & Musk
What Makes F&R Soap So Exceptional?
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Shea & Cocoa Butters - Moisturizes & smooths skin
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Olive & Grapeseed Oil - helps improve complexion
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Gentle Exfoliation - This exfoliating formula offers enough grit to keep your skin healthy and fresh without over-exfoliating which can lead to dry and irritated skin
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Triple Milled - Designed to last a long time. Soap lasts months, not weeks
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Colossal Size - 8.8 ounces
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Fine Fragrance - A mix of naturally sourced essential oils and perfumers ingredients with the express purpose of enhancing the experiential element of your grooming routine
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Rich Lather - lathers up thick and foamy if you're using a washcloth, but also does a great job if you're going straight bar-to-skin too
INSPIRATION:
In a city that has become a beacon of ambition and invention, Lady Bird Lake remains a refuge—a place where the pace eases and the world feels briefly whole again. Just beyond the hum of Austin’s music, traffic, and striving, the air shifts—softening into something slower and more generous. Along its trails, wildflowers bloom in colors so vivid they seem almost unreal.
Lady Bird captures that moment: the delicate green-blue hush of Bluebonnets, the soft lift of Rose and Freesia, and the brightness of Raspberry carried on the breeze. Beneath it all, warm woods and ambered musk linger like a deep breath taken without hurry.
The lake itself is named in honor of Lady Bird Johnson, whose commitment to planting wildflowers across Texas was never merely decorative, but a quiet philosophy–even in times of upheaval or tumult, we still need beauty.
Lady Bird is a reminder of that kind conviction—
that while we work, strive, and build,
while the world moves quickly and loudly,
there is meaning in choosing to pause.
To look around.
To notice the wildflowers.
And when we can, to plant a few of our own.
ABOUT THE PERFUMER
Dana Schmitt
Dana Schmitt remembers the exact moment she decided to become a perfumer. During college, where she studied chemistry and French, she visited a friend studying abroad in Paris and toured the perfume museum.
“There's a whole section dedicated to the perfumer, about how you had to be scientific, creative and have a good sense of smell,” she recalls. “It was so perfect for me. I felt like it was a calling.” Dana found an entry-level position in a lab for her first job. A couple of years later, she was accepted to Givaudan’s perfume school.
Pushing olfactive boundaries is what Dana relishes most about her job. “It's the whole process of having an idea and bringing it to fruition,” she says.
“It’s this artistic endeavor that can be filled with challenges, of being inspired by the world around you and trying to capture that and give it to other people.”
A Note from the Perfumer:
"It’s like a flower with this candy-coated vibe floating through the desert air. You get these bursts of sweet, fruity scents, and then the Black-Jack Flower blooms hit you, pulling your attention away from the heat. The air gets all warm and spicy, with hints of sun-dried wood, like it’s leading you down some dusty desert road to who-knows-what kind of adventure."