I grew up on the east coast and it was always called a dopp bag in my family. I didn’t know where the term came from or if I’ve ever heard that used outside my family. But that’s what I’d call a travel toiletries kit.
I got one when I was a teenager, because a young man should have one. That was over 50 years ago. I was about to toss it out, when I realized my blood pressure machine fits neatly inside it.
My grandfather taught me the term, ca 1980, when I was about 10. I always associated it with the very specific bag that kinda looked like a doctor’s bag with the flaps that come down on the ends. I’m sure he got the name in WW II. He was a radio man in the war.
My dad (born 1954) used the phrase “Dopp kit” to refer to a single-compartment, zippered, leather bag about the size of a ladies’ dress shoe box. He used it to store a corded electric razor; I don’t remember him using it for travel, but he indicated it was originally intended to be a men’s toiletry bag.
The one my dad had was issued to him by the military. He got paid $5 cash, then the next stop in the line they took the $5 from him and sold him a toiletries bag with stuff in it, including, by way of change, a couple of cigarettes. He told me that the $5 was called “the flying five”.
My dad always referred to a toiletry kit as a Dopp kit. I did not know it was an actual product with that name (thanks OP). He was an airline pilot and spent some time in the military, so maybe he had a real one at some point.
Since I used to travel a lot, I have used the term occasionally and my spouse knows what I mean. My son, though, probably has no idea.
A couple of decades ago, I got a nice, blue, nylon, tri-fold toiletry bag from REI. It had a built-in hanger, and a built-in mirror. I seem to have misplaced it. I think I couldn’t find it when we went on vacation last November. I’m sure it will turn up eventually. In the meantime…
… I’m building an old-school Dopp kit. I have a leather bag, a safety razor (I’ll have to take it out when I fly), and a first-aid kit. I’ll keep adding stuff to it until it’s complete.
I never heard the term until Johnny LA mentioned it in another thread today. The ditty bag I was issued in boot camp was a mesh bag maybe ten inches square like the one my wife uses to make sure her socks stay together in the wash.
I ended up with two Gerber Multitools. One of them has a few sockets, and my first one – which I lost and then got a replacement before finding it – doesn’t. I’ve barely used them in the couple of decades I’ve owned them, so I may as well put one in the Dopp kit. They have blades though (as does my safety razor and my first aid kit), so they’ll have to go into checked baggage when I fly.
At one point, I would take the toiletries from the bathroom for travel in the toiletries bag. But then I put together a second set of toiletries that stays in the toiletries bag. And then with the TSA one-ounce restrictions, I have a third set, in which all of the liquids are in one ounce or 100ml containers. That one I use when I travel with only a carry-on bag, while the first one is used for trips where I drive or check a suitcase.
And then I put together a “digital” Dopp kit, with all of the cables and accessories I might need for my computers and phones. It also has a little stand so I can use my iPhone as a bedside alarm clock in hotel rooms.