Results 11 to 12 of 12
Like Tree39Likes

Thread: Beginners' Tips: September 2015

Threaded View

  1. #1
    There is no charge for Awesomeness Jimbo's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Maleny, Australia
    Posts
    7,977
    Thanked: 1587
    Blog Entries
    3

    Default Beginners' Tips: September 2015

    TIME

    Name:  xgh-dyPp_400x400.jpeg
Views: 429
Size:  34.8 KB

    About 3 months ago an acquaintance of mine expressed an interest in straight razor shaving. Always keen to encourage new people into the sport, I offered to loan him a razor (suitably honed of course) and a strop with which to learn. I gave him a demonstration of how to shave and strop, a few tips and a hearty "good luck!", and left him to carry on.

    The next time I saw him I asked how it was going. He told me that
    it wasn't working out too well. It seems he had built up the habit of shaving
    quickly over the years with his disposable razors, and applying that
    same principle to the straight razor had lead, while perhaps not to complete disaster, certainly to a few cuts and abrasions. He needed more time to shave with a straight razor.

    It is a fairly common beginner's question on this site: how long does it take you to shave with a straight razor? The answer of course depends on many
    things. People who've been at it for a while will generally answer "as
    long as it takes"; intermediate shavers will often give an actual
    time; the pedantic among us (and I include myself in this category on occasion) will want to know how whether you mean a single-or multiple-pass shave.

    However, in my opinion straight razor shaving is not about minutes and
    seconds. But it is about TIME.

    Time to yourself. Time to think. Time to relax. Time to learn a new
    skill. Allowing yourself time. Forgetting the clock, work, your phone,
    ipad, computer, email, Facebook, your
    worries and cares for some small part of the day. It's a very
    liberating experience and in my opinion a much-needed respite from the
    frenetic pace of the modern world.

    So when you are starting out and learning the skills needed to not
    Edward Scissor-hands yourself, try not to worry too much about the
    time it takes if you can help it. (If you are a busy person, perhaps in
    the initial stages try to learn on the weekends.) The time you are
    taking now is in fact training your skills in more than the physical
    action of shaving with a straight razor - it's also training you to
    relax and take some well-deserved time for yourself.

    Shave long and prosper.

    James.
    Last edited by Jimbo; 09-19-2015 at 07:27 AM.
    <This signature intentionally left blank>

  2. The Following 13 Users Say Thank You to Jimbo For This Useful Post:

    Chevhead (09-20-2015), DoughBoy68 (09-19-2015), edhewitt (09-27-2015), Geezer (09-19-2015), Haroldg48 (09-20-2015), Hirlau (09-19-2015), JimmyHAD (09-20-2015), Leatherstockiings (09-19-2015), Phrank (09-19-2015), RezDog (09-19-2015), RobinK (09-19-2015), sharptonn (10-12-2015), Substance (09-20-2015)

Posting Permissions

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