The temptation to add more
When creating something by hand, there is always another possibility.
Another ingredient.
Another fragrance.
Another colour.
Another idea that promises to make the product feel more complete.
Sometimes we say yes.
More often, we ask a different question.
Would it actually make the experience better?
If the answer is uncertain, we leave it out.
Restraint is a decision
People often think simplicity happens naturally.
It rarely does.
Simplicity is usually the result of many deliberate choices.
Choosing not to add something can require more confidence than adding it.
It asks us to trust the original intention instead of chasing every possibility.
That kind of restraint shapes every product we make.
Space has value
A quiet room feels different from a crowded one.
A carefully arranged home feels different from one filled with unnecessary things.
The same is true of formulation.
Every ingredient needs room to contribute.
Every fragrance needs room to breathe.
When too many ideas compete, none of them are fully heard.
We have learned that space is not something missing.
It is part of the design.
Knowing when to stop
One of the hardest moments in making anything is recognising when it is finished.
Not because there is nothing left to add.
Because there is nothing else that truly needs to be.
That moment cannot be measured.
It comes from experience, observation, and the willingness to leave well enough alone.
Sometimes the final decision is not what we include.
It is what we choose to leave behind.
Simplicity is never empty
Simple should never mean plain.
It should never mean unfinished.
For us, simplicity means that every element has earned its place.
Nothing is included to impress.
Nothing is added simply because it can be.
The result is not less thoughtful.
It is more intentional.
Making room for the ritual
The bath has never been about the product alone.
It is about the moment it creates.
By keeping our formulas focused, we leave room for something more important.
Warm water.
Stillness.
A slower evening.
The quiet feeling that nothing else is needed.
Sometimes less really is more.