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Thread: Odds and ends
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02-27-2007, 11:19 PM #1
Odds and ends
After doing this for a few months I toss some thoughts out here in case any Seniors can offer helpful thoughts in reply and for any fellow newbies who may find some benefit in them...
- Axioms - I really appreciate the axioms in this sticky post and find them helpful. If you are a newbie and haven't read them - do.
- Breath! - Sometimes I have been so tensed up for various reasons, I swear I forgot to breath...until my hand would shake and I'd get a lousy shave at best or whack myself at worst. Sheesh. So relax already...it's just a shave!
- Better technique -OR- BBS - I'm not good enough (yet) to get a BBS every time out. If I gotta feel that glassy smooth finish all over, then I make myself use the DE. Some day I may have both but for now, I gotta make a choice. Spending an hour at the sink fiddling my face into a burned, nicked mess, only to still have stubble just leaves me discouraged and wishing I'd moved on...and I really haven't improved my skills any.
- Angle to the hair is what counts - It may seem like over-thinking to others but for me, a breakthrough has been to think of the angle of the blade to my hairs not my skin. This fine tunes my movements around my face and shaves better.
- Lighter is better - When things seem not to be cutting, sometimes it seems the lighter touch actually slices the hairs better, though it's natural to bear down more. I suspect it helps keep the angle better, it certainly keeps the comfort better.
- Reduce with each pass - It's been mentioned other places, but this really helps me. The final result is better and lets me have realistic expectations for each pass.
- Gotta be sharp! - Oft' repeated, but can't be overemphasized...it's gotta be SHARP! So, getting consistent with my stropping/honing skills are as important as any shave technique I'm trying.
- Patience! - I gotta let it come to me. Hearing the Senior's talk about still learning is an encouragement to be patient. Believing they actually get a good and pleasant shave each day is helpful too!
- Keeping it wet - While concentrating on all the other things of the shave, I sometimes would keep forging ahead over a dried spot. Enough burns and stubble have reminded me to re-wet, re-lather as needed just ahead of where I'm headed next.
- Routine - I'm still working this one out, but I hope to get into a routine; that is a repeated sequence of steps across my face and through the passes. Maybe it's just me, but I think I'd me more efficient and enjoy it more. I enjoy the slowed-down time shaving, but do have other things to move on to.
- Barber books - I have found real help in digesting the shaving/honing/stropping content of a 1961 barber text book I got. You have to translate the shaving skills from shaving someone else to shaving yourself, but it's been helpful for me.
- THANKS! for the help and fun along the way from all who share in this SRP.
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02-27-2007, 11:24 PM #2
These are some good points, Dale. Especially #4 which is not a way that we usually express it, but undoubtedly exactly what we mean when we suggest playing with the angle. Great observations.
X
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02-27-2007, 11:50 PM #3
Great post, and thank you for sharing it! Items #5, 8, & 9 hit home with me (heck, #7 too!).
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02-28-2007, 03:52 AM #4
With the shaving insight you have you are well on the way to mastery of straight shaving.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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02-28-2007, 03:58 AM #5
- Join Date
- Sep 2006
- Posts
- 1,180
Thanked: 1Excellent observations!!
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03-01-2007, 06:29 PM #6
Still keeping almost all of these in the forefront of the mind on every shave. Most of the others...working on 'em.