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Thread: Sharpen a straight razor
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05-20-2014, 11:18 PM #1
- Join Date
- May 2014
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- Slovenia
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Thanked: 0Sharpen a straight razor
I posted the following over at bladeforums:
I ordered a new straight razor it arrived yesterday along with the brush. The item was as described handle is steel+wood handle and the razor/blade is steel as well. The blade is a straight blade not the curved one I washed the blade and tried shaving but this thing just isn't cutting I tried every possible angle and pressure but nothing. I tried against and with the grain nothing : /
I even tried shaving some hair on the arm but it's just not cutting at all. However the blade does feel sharp to the touch when I press on it with my finger.
What I have in my disposal is a sharpening stone, sharpening file both for kitchen knifes and I have few straps of Japanese tooling leather some are regular some are vegetable treated and off course the old
military leather belt.
I tried 100 swaps on the tooling leather and the blade is just not as sharp to cut when you pull against the direction of hair growth even if I apply pretty decent pressure I don't want to hit it with a stone to ruin the blade. What are my options ?
I paid 599$ for the razor and then some 200$ for oils, brush and what no but did not get a strop. The razor feels very sharp to the touch but won't cut hair regardless of pressure. I was pretty disappointed that this is not shave ready.
Question: Is there anything I have or could have at my disposal that could help me sharpen this thing up, up to a point where I could use it for a shave ?
Otherwise what is my best option, (I was thinking of taking it to a local work shop that sharpens knifes for restaurants see if they can help me out) ? I'm central EU with no local honemeister to take this to, closest one I found was UK the postage makes it some 120$ for two way shipping + then some 20-70$ for sharpening, which is not that big of a problem if this is a once a year thing. But this again means sending it then waiting up to a month to get the thing back so I was thinking of possibly joust keeping this one as eye candy and buying a new one in some 80-150$ range that's shave ready but not sure which one to pick.
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05-20-2014, 11:34 PM #2
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Location
- Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada
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- 14,454
Thanked: 4830My geography s not good. If you go the top bar there are two menu lines. On the bottom line click community, and then from the drop down click member list, then search members, then advanced search you can search by location. If you find someone near by the send them a private message. There are ads for honing here Member Services - Straight Razor Place Classifieds
It's not what you know, it's who you take fishing!
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05-21-2014, 12:01 AM #3
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- Jun 2007
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- North Idaho Redoubt
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Thanked: 13249Can we see the Razor ???
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05-21-2014, 12:10 AM #4
- Join Date
- May 2014
- Location
- Slovenia
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Thanked: 0
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05-21-2014, 12:20 AM #5
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Location
- North Idaho Redoubt
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Thanked: 13249But it was a Hart ??
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05-21-2014, 01:23 AM #6
Weird, they usually send those out ready to go. Sounds like it wasn't honed completely and you may have dulled the bevel they put on it. Or they may not have completely set the bevel in the first place. Honestly I wouldn't use the sharpening files, they normally aren't more than 1-2k in grit and you are bound to roll the edge. The cheapest option sounds like a Narniwa 3k/8k or henkels combo and bite the bullet and learn. Otherwise you are still going to have to send it out 2-3x's a year unless you find a cheap barbers hone to maintain your edge every few months, or diamond or chrome are good as well
Mastering implies there is nothing more for you to learn of something... I prefer proficient enough to not totally screw it up.