The Truth About QUIVR by IMJOSHV
QUIVR is the newest detailing brand from content creator IMJOSHV. The marketing is clean, the bottles look great, and the brand is clearly getting traction. But is it actually different—or just a repackaged version of what’s already out there?
What Is QUIVR?
QUIVR is a car care product line built around IMJOSHV’s detailing and content creation brand. The product line launched with a ceramic spray called Hot Coat, a high-foaming soap called Rogue Soap, a foam cannon, and a few accessories.
The launch was positioned as a premium, curated product line—but for those of us who’ve tested hundreds of detailing products, some things stood out right away…
Timing & Product Similarities
One of the first things many noticed was how quickly QUIVR’s product names, colors, and functions mirrored others already on the market:
- Rogue Soap is nearly identical in color to The Super Soaper, which was released months prior.
- Hot Coat entered the ceramic spray market right as Tough As Shell was gaining momentum.
- The foam cannon design matches private-label designs commonly used across many brands.
To be clear, similarities in car care are common. But the overlap in presentation and timing was noticeable to many in the industry.
Branding vs. Backing
QUIVR’s strongest asset is branding. The labels are clean, the colors are bold, and the influencer connection creates instant visibility. But when it comes to product innovation or chemistry, there's very little transparency.
At Jimbo’s Detailing, every formula is custom-built with a real chemist. Every product is tested, refined, and developed through real-world use—not picked from a catalog. That distinction matters when you’re trying to stand out in a crowded space.
Transparency to the Customer
One thing missing from QUIVR’s rollout is technical documentation or usage guides beyond basic promotional videos. There’s no detailed explanation of how or why the products work, what surfaces they’re safe on, or what makes them different from the competition.
By contrast, Tough As Shell has in-depth application instructions, FAQ support, and side-by-side testing available for anyone curious—not just fans of the brand.
Performance vs. Packaging
Packaging sells the first bottle. But results sell the second.
So far, Rogue Soap has underwhelmed in real-world testing. Foam output is light, dwell time is short, and cleaning power is minimal unless boosted with a second product. The foam cannon looks premium but functions like an entry-level tool.
On the other hand, The Super Soaper and Tough As Shell were formulated to solve actual detailing problems—not just fill a shelf with more SKUs.
Want a Product Line Built by a Detailer, Not Just a Brand?
At Jimbo’s Detailing, every product is custom-formulated, field-tested, and trusted by real pros. No gimmicks—just results.
Final Thoughts
QUIVR has a strong brand presence and influencer-driven momentum. But when you peel back the label, it feels more curated than created. There’s nothing wrong with promoting good-looking products—but performance, transparency, and originality still matter.
If you’re looking for foam that clings, coatings that protect, and formulas built by real detailers—you won’t find that in branding alone. You’ll find it in Jimbo’s Detailing.
Related Posts
- QUIVR Rogue Soap vs. The Super Soaper – Which Foams Better?
- QUIVR Hot Coat vs. Tough As Shell – Ceramic Spray Showdown
- QUIVR Foam Cannon Review – Is It Worth the Hype?
- QUIVR vs. Jimbo’s Detailing – Full Product Line Comparison & Buyer’s Guide