The Hand Wash That Keeps Turning Up in Britain's Best Restaurants
Wash your hands somewhere good enough, lately, and you may have met it without ever learning its name — a heavy glass bottle, an unusually beautiful scent, no branding asking for your attention. Here is what it is, and why it keeps appearing.
There is a small, specific pleasure that happens in good restaurants, and it has nothing to do with the food. It happens in the washroom. You go to rinse your hands between courses, reach for the soap without thinking, and then — stop. The bottle is heavier than it has any right to be. The scent is not the usual sharp, institutional citrus. For a moment, washing your hands stops being a chore and becomes something close to a pleasure.
And if you eat out often enough, you start to notice something stranger still. It is, with surprising frequency, the same bottle.
The brand is Gloved. You will rarely see it announced — there is no card propped by the basin, no logo on the mirror. It simply sits there, doing its quiet work, while a certain kind of guest picks it up, turns it over, and discreetly photographs the label before returning to the table.
A detail that gives the room away
Restaurants that obsess over the bread, the lighting and the playlist tend, sooner or later, to obsess over the washroom too. It is the one room in the building where every guest is completely alone with the details — nothing performing for anyone. A growing number of those rooms — restaurants, boutique hotels, members' clubs — have quietly arrived at the same answer. It makes more sense once you know who makes it.
Made by a perfumer, not a soap company
Gloved was founded by Tom Daxon, the British perfumer behind the fragrance house of the same name. That lineage matters more than it sounds. Most hand washes are formulated by detergent manufacturers and given a scent at the very end of the process, almost as an afterthought. Gloved was built the other way around: the scent comes first, composed by someone who composes fragrance for a living — and the formula is then engineered to behave like skincare rather than soap.
Used this in a restaurant and the smell was amazing. I had to have some.
That is the part that tends to surprise people. Inside the bottle are ingredients you would more readily expect in a face serum — hyaluronic acid, provitamin B5, squalane — than in something that lives by a sink. The brand's word for the result is “Beyond Gentle”: the idea that washing your hands should leave the skin better than it found it, rather than tight and stripped. Most washes quietly strip the skin barrier a little, every time. This one is designed not to. “Prevention is better than cure,” as the founder puts it.

Three scents, and the case for not choosing
There are three worth knowing. Cedarwood, the signature — green and woody, like a still forest early on a spring morning. Soft Nude, warmer and quieter, the smell of skin freshly washed and still warm. And Petitgrain, the bright one, all bitter-orange leaf and clean sunlight. They were composed to live together rather than compete, which is why the brand's most popular introduction is not a single bottle but the Hand Wash Trio: all three, full-size, in their weighty refillable glass — one for the kitchen, one for the cloakroom, one for wherever else you would like the small daily pleasure to happen.
This, more or less, is how most people come to Gloved. Not through an advertisement, but through a sink. The reviews read a little like confessions — guests who interrogated a host about the soap, dinner companions who left with a photograph of a label, people who spent two months thinking about it before giving in. The brand currently holds 4.73 out of 5 across more than two thousand reviews.
The only catch
You cannot, of course, buy Gloved at the restaurant. The bottle on that beautiful basin is not for sale — only the memory of having used it. Gloved is sold directly, and the Hand Wash Trio is, in effect, the brand's answer to everyone who goes looking afterwards. If you have been meaning to track it down: here it is.