Results 1 to 10 of 19
-
12-03-2016, 01:47 AM #1
To be or not to be (shave ready that is)
So a friend of mine is wanting to sell some of his straights in his collection. I am not asking what they are worth or if you want to buy them, but we were discussing whether or not they would be worth more honed up or not. I was thinking that to us people with RAD and experience honing wouldn't care if it was shave ready or not as we would normally re-hone it to our personal likings anyways before use. However, I was also thinking that if it is made shave ready before selling then it would appeal to people who don't have experience with honing or someone looking to get into straights.
He thinks the razors should just be left alone in their current condition with no claims to shave readiness as more people will want something that hasn't been messed with, or messed with as little as possible being they're all vintage razors no NOS or new current production. Also another point he brought up was that my shave ready and your shave ready could be very different and thus a buyer could demand a return or leave negative feed back because the razor wasn't sharp enough to shave a porcupine with one clean swipe.
So what do you guys think. I have bought plenty of razors on the bay but never sold one so I really don't know. Actually never sold anything on the bay before so I don't really know.
-
12-03-2016, 01:53 AM #2
I would just make them as presentable as possible and take really good photos. I think really good photos would be more of a selling advantage, than a couple of shots without detail. I would not shave ready them, let the buyer make the decision. JMO.
-
12-03-2016, 01:55 AM #3
I agree with your friend unless he is willing to offer a complimentary rehoning if needed.
Don't promise what you are not willing to back.
-
12-03-2016, 01:55 AM #4
-
12-03-2016, 01:58 AM #5
- Join Date
- Jul 2016
- Posts
- 36
Thanked: 2Either way, I wouldn't market them as "shave ready" you could say that they are honed to the point that he shaves with, appealing to those,like me, looking to buy their first razor. I agree that "shave ready" does differ from person to person, depending on various factors, so marketing as shave ready is really pointless. But it is nice to the newbies to know that they could *attempt* a shave with it out of the box, and like you mentioned, those experienced would re hone anyway. So why not get them honed up and to the point he'd shave with them and just say that, but not necessarily "shave ready".
I'll send you a pm [emoji6]Last edited by Nhyrum; 12-03-2016 at 02:03 AM.
-
12-03-2016, 02:02 AM #6
-
12-03-2016, 02:04 AM #7
- Join Date
- Jul 2016
- Posts
- 36
Thanked: 2
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Nhyrum For This Useful Post:
Hirlau (12-03-2016)
-
12-03-2016, 02:04 AM #8
Whenever I see "shave ready" on the bay I never really believe it anyway. Maybe some on there actually are, I don't know. I would play it safe and not claim shave ready. Here's a razor, it's used, here's everything that's wrong with it, here's lots of pictures. Be totally honest and inform the buyer of everything. For the times that I use that site, those are the kinds of sellers that get my bids anyway.
"Go easy"
-
12-03-2016, 02:05 AM #9
-
12-03-2016, 02:09 AM #10
- Join Date
- Jul 2016
- Posts
- 36
Thanked: 2