Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 18
Like Tree19Likes

Thread: Shaving with only a kettle of water & handheld mirror. No pressurised tap water.

  1. #1
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Sydney, Australia
    Posts
    14
    Thanked: 1

    Default Shaving with only a kettle of water & handheld mirror. No pressurised tap water.

    Hello. It has been a year since I posted here, and I have found it difficult to maintain my interest in shaving because of the disincentives of my current household situation. I come to you asking for help in these dire straits.


    • I am a DE shaver and love the shaving ritual. I have only been DE shaving for about 1-2 years and I am quite slow (30 mins for WTG, 45 mins for WTG+ATG).



    • I have trouble getting even 1 shave per week in my house, because I can't access the bathroom in the morning due to living with 3 high maintenance women.



    • I am thinking of switching from DE razor > Straight razor, due to less reliance on pressured running water. Pressured running water to unclog soap and hair from the blade. I have tried jiggling the DE razor in an ice cream tub of water but it doesn't really come out clean.


    Can I get some opinions on whether any forum members have shaved with just a small handheld mirror, a tub and a kettle of hot water? (DE or straight)

    I would appreciate any suggestions as my hobby is slowly dying...
    I prefer DE over straight razors because I do not know how to hone or strop, but I'm so desperate now I will do ANYTHING (including abandoning my DE) just to feel the nice warm lather being peeled off my cheek by a sharp blade.


    P.S. The original idea to switch from DE > straight, came from the 2007 musical-movie Sweeney Todd starring Johnny Depp. I saw the excess lather on the blade just get rubbed off on a cloth. Does this really work? Can you just rub the lather and hair off the blade cleanly? Then just pack up and go about your 8-hour day without any kind of rusting or deterioration of the blade?

  2. #2
    Senior Member ncraigtrn's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2014
    Location
    southern California
    Posts
    412
    Thanked: 38

    Default

    There are lots of straight users that only use a towel and no running water to rinse the blade. It can be done. And stropping isn't as difficult as it seems.

  3. #3
    Senior Member blabbermouth
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Pequea, Pennsylvania
    Posts
    2,290
    Thanked: 375

    Default

    First thing that comes to mind, get rid of the woman......... just kidding............really, shave in the evening. Problem solved. LOL
    I think maybe and this is just my opinion that you should stick with a DE. If you're at 30 min for one pass, a straight is going to take you an hour. I'm not poking fun but I shave my head with a DE and when time restrictions prevent me from using a straight razor I shave my beard with a DE too. So within 10-12 minutes I shave my head and beard, 2 passes with a third in some spots.

    And your reference to wiping the lather off on a cloth from a straight would be correct, just one of many ways it could be done. As far as the upkeep of the razor it's bit more involved compared to a DE. The razor needs to be dried thoroughly or it will rust, stropping the razor is a must, and as far as keeping it sharp (if all ready) I would think a barber hone would keep you going for some time before the edge would need attention from someone who has the hones.

    Hope that helps?

    I know that one of the members (Carl) here I believe does Sunday shaves with an old setup. A stand, bowl of water and mirror.
    Walterbowens likes this.
    CHRIS

  4. #4
    Senior Member blabbermouth Substance's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2013
    Location
    Gladstone QLD AUSTRALIA
    Posts
    3,245
    Thanked: 804

    Default

    I am fairly water wise I think
    As I fill up the sink about 2 inches to heat a flannel, my brush and bowl,
    use a sponge to wipe my straight clean as I go
    And the flannel is under my bowl in the sink as a bash barrier while it stay warm & to wipe my face with the flannel
    Usually do 3 passes and all stays warm
    then clean my blade with the flannel to clean followed by T.P.
    Can clean it all down with the water etc

    if I do a 2 pass I am done in about 20 minutes max
    Last edited by Substance; 05-22-2014 at 08:04 AM.
    Saved,
    to shave another day.

  5. #5
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Location
    Moses Lake Wa.
    Posts
    162
    Thanked: 20

    Default

    For sport last fall I took along my Wade and Butcher, a stainless steel bowl (from a flea market) and a polished up 12''X 12'' X 3/16 piece of stainless steel up camping. I left on a Wednesday so i figured buy Saturday morning I would be ready for that shave. Saturday morning I awoke from the tent to 13 degrees F and did not feel like shaving that cold so I went to the spring, cleared off the ice and filled the stainless steel bowl to let it warm. Around noon, the air had warmed to a balmy 40 degrees, so I striped off my shirt, prepped my face and shaved. I taped the stainless plate to my canopy cover of the truck and used the tailgate as a bench/table, using a washcloth to wipe the blade. surprisingly, it was a pretty good shave. When I do it next time I will take a brush( used Palmolive and my hand to build a lather) and some other small items, might even try heating the water up to. So in short, you can do it with little or nothing.

  6. #6
    Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2012
    Posts
    71
    Thanked: 14

    Default

    My advice would be to continue shaving with your DE but also to start learning straight shaving. Get an inexpensive but shave ready straight razor from Whipped Dog or SRP's Classifieds, a cheap strop, some chromium oxide, watch some straight shaving videos and start learning SR shaving, don't delay, stop procrastinating, start today. Watch several of Lynn's SR shaving videos where he advises to start slowly on easy areas of your face like cheeks.

    When you come to a fork in the road, take it. In other words, make a decision and start the journey. You will find what's right for you as you go on your journey.

    You can use a sink full of warm water and a sponge for either your DE or SR. Swish the razor around in the water then if needed, wipe it across the wet sponge. Running water is not required to have a good shave.

    I started by dumping my cartridge razors into the garbage, then used DE razors for awhile, then used a SR with final pass with DE, then finally I use mostly SR's now. So I went thru a learning process. Make your own journey and enjoy the trip. It's your shave. Use any combo of razors that you like. Once you learn straights, your hobby widens out to more possibilities because there's such a variety of SRs that you'll find something that you really enjoy.

  7. #7
    Senior Member blabbermouth
    Join Date
    Mar 2012
    Location
    Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
    Posts
    17,304
    Thanked: 3226

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Trimmy72 View Post
    I think maybe and this is just my opinion that you should stick with a DE. If you're at 30 min for one pass, a straight is going to take you an hour. I'm not poking fun but I shave my head with a DE and when time restrictions prevent me from using a straight razor I shave my beard with a DE too. So within 10-12 minutes I shave my head and beard, 2 passes with a third in some spots.
    That would be my thoughts also. If you are having trouble clearing the lather off you DE it may be due to your lather being too dry and thick especially if you lather your whole face and take that long to do a pass. You could try just lathering a small part of your face at a time so the lather stays moist and comes off the razor easily. I use cold water to shave and the soap comes off the DE easily if it has not dried out too much or I made it too dry in the first place.

    Bob
    Life is a terminal illness in the end

  8. #8
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2014
    Location
    Bryan, TX
    Posts
    1,251
    Thanked: 228

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by scotishcavalir View Post
    For sport last fall I took along my Wade and Butcher, a stainless steel bowl (from a flea market) and a polished up 12''X 12'' X 3/16 piece of stainless steel up camping. I left on a Wednesday so i figured buy Saturday morning I would be ready for that shave. Saturday morning I awoke from the tent to 13 degrees F and did not feel like shaving that cold so I went to the spring, cleared off the ice and filled the stainless steel bowl to let it warm. Around noon, the air had warmed to a balmy 40 degrees, so I striped off my shirt, prepped my face and shaved. I taped the stainless plate to my canopy cover of the truck and used the tailgate as a bench/table, using a washcloth to wipe the blade. surprisingly, it was a pretty good shave. When I do it next time I will take a brush( used Palmolive and my hand to build a lather) and some other small items, might even try heating the water up to. So in short, you can do it with little or nothing.

    Wow, that is hardcore.

    Atomicnewbie, I agree with a previous reply, shave in the evening.
    Trimmy72 likes this.

  9. #9
    Senior Member blabbermouth tcrideshd's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2013
    Location
    Oakland Tn
    Posts
    6,588
    Thanked: 1894

    Default

    From what I've seen Carl even shaves outdoors ,, he is a real man,s ,man!!! So yes you can manage. Great advice from everyone. Tc
    “ I,m getting the impression that everyone thinks I have TIME to fix their bikes”

  10. #10
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Sydney, Australia
    Posts
    14
    Thanked: 1

    Default

    Thanks for the replies everyone. Lots of good ideas and I will try them all

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •