Quote Originally Posted by Alwill747 View Post
Hi guys,hoping for a bit of advice. I have a Thiers-Issard razor and a Boker. The Boker I bought online and it was delivered 'shave ready' after the attention of a Honemiester - it's very sharp! The Thiers-Issard I bought from 'The Art of Shaving' shop in San Francisco and although the salesman said it was 'shave ready' the box was factory sealed. I've have a couple of months of use from the razors and have now bought a modular paddle strop and a 5/8/12000 Naniwa Super Stones set up from Straight Razor Designs.My problem is this: I've used the diamond spray on the paddle strop with both razors, the Boker is super sharp and continues to give a great shave. On the other hand the Thiers-Issard feels as blunt as a butter knife. I've watched Lynn Abrams video on refreshing a razor - and used his demonstrated method with my Super Stones on the Thiers-Issard with the result - it's still as blunt as a butter knife! The question is, where to go from here?for completeness! I've also bought a couple of cheap old razors from Whipped Dog for me to learn how to hone with. I don't want to risk my ham fisted talents on my main razors yet!thanks for any help.
Sounds like you already have a good plan in place. Get the hang of honing on a cheap razor and then if you're not satisfied with your TI, tickle it until its how you like it, maybe using the pyramid method until you get the hang of it. One piece of equipment that I found really useful when learning to hone (and still find useful) is a 400x digital microscope, just plug it into your laptop and you can see what's happening with your edge. You can buy them on ebay for around $40. As for your Boker being superior to your TI, this isn't surprising. As everyone knows, Bokers are superior to everything. Not only are they the easiest to hone, they also give the best shaves are the best looking razors and smell great too (does anyone else smell a troll? .