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Thread: Rounded tip or not

  1. #11
    Senior Member apipeguy's Avatar
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    When I first started with the straight, I read everything I could possibly read about all aspects of the straight. Read all about improper stropping and rolling an edge. I was so afraid of rolling and edge that I was more concerned about putting my blade on leather than I was putting it on my skin. What it all boils down to is that you can not learn without practicing. You have to do it to develop the proper feel, flip and pressure. I will say that I'm sure you can roll an edge but I think that I read it can happen far more than reading that it did happen.

    Practice with a light touch-weight of the blade pressure. Stop all movement at the end of the stroke and get the flip down correctly before starting the razor moving again.

    All it takes is time, experience and practice, you will get it.
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  2. #12
    Senior Member AlienEdge's Avatar
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    Also keep the strop pulled tight don't let it sag. You don't want it to bow keep it tight . Move your razor up the strop like it was wet concert and you want to put a glass finish on it . Go slow up & down the strop. A bow caused by laziness or to much pressure is not good . Don't try to do it fast. Slow & soft put a glass finish on your strop. I hope this helps

  3. #13
    Senior Member blabbermouth eddy79's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jrudd View Post

    One particular part of the subject is the part of rolling the blade. I read this all the time from members replying to new members posts. When someone starting out comments about their shaves not working out, at least one person states that the edge could be rolled due to improper stropping.

    My problem is, how do us new guys know? We could continuosly send our razors in for re-honing but that seems a bit crazy. I read somewhere that a new guy sent his razor in for honing fearing a rolled edge. The person doing the re-honing stated that he only had to strop properly to return the edge
    I think the suggestion of a rolled edge is far more common than a rolled edge. There is a good YouTube video that shows all the basics of checking out a edge for faults that Euclid has posted many times.

    The problem is new guy says I have a problem and none of us can see the blade so we fire off the most common ailments and hope it helps. You can learn to check out the edge yourself or better find a bit local help.

    It's not as complicated as it seems so go slow, light and do plenty of laps. Strop even when you don't need to. Spend 10 minutes a couple times a day and in a week it seems easy. Don't over think it just keep a taught strop and light touch and you will be fine.

    No round toe is my recommendation only because I find I have problems with a square toe on my neck in the hollows when I need to use the toe to scoop inside the hollows.
    Last edited by eddy79; 11-28-2015 at 01:25 AM.
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  4. #14
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    As a beginner, first shave may be tomorrow, I would get a Cheap 440 stainless razor and practice stropping. This is what I've done. The trick is how you roll your wrist and thumb with the blade to keep from lifting the edge on the strop dulling it.

  5. #15
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    Okay, so I shaved this morning after stropping 20 times on the cloth side then roughly 60 on the leather. The shave went great. One pass with the grain, one pass across the grain and one pass against the grain. It felt pretty good until a few minutes after finishing. I had red rough skin on my neck, chin, and at the edges of my mouth. I am glad a I have a full arsenal of post hair removal lotions and oils thanks to the wife but I should have to use it. I am starting to feel like I am a teenager just learning to shave.
    Last edited by jrudd; 11-29-2015 at 02:08 AM.

  6. #16
    MJC
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    Quote Originally Posted by jrudd View Post
    Okay, so I shaved this morning after stropping 20 times on the cloth side then roughly 60 on the leather. The shave went great. One pass with the grain, one pass across the grain and one pass against the grain. It felt pretty good until a few minutes after finishing. I had red rough skin on my neck, chin, and at the edges of my mouth. I am glad a I have a full arsenal of post hair removal lotions and oils thanks to the wife but I should have to use it. I am starting to feel like I am a teenager just learning to shave.
    Classic "too much - too soon" results, and we have all been there.

    The irritation is most likely a combination of too much pressure - one of the harder things to get a handle after using carts - and too many passes (with too much pressure)

    But if you have not bled out by now, this is going to be easy to fix.
    Give yourself a break for a day or two if you can to let the face heal/recover.
    And when you do shave, think; "comfort is King" and "only enough pressure to remove the lather"

    Conventional wisdom (whatever that is) is to start with the WTG pass and follow up with a DE when you are starting out - adding passes (XTG, ATG) in stages.

    Comfort first, closeness and speed will come along shortly...
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  7. #17
    Senior Member blabbermouth eddy79's Avatar
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    +1 to the above. Take it slow or your going to be getting these results for a while. We have all done it and all that happens is you spend more time healing than shaving. Slow and steady and it won't be long before you will be able to do it all
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  8. #18
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    So, I took everyone's advice and took it slow this morning. I concentrated on angle and pressure. It was difficult for me as it seems to go against my instinct to use such light pressure. I was surprised that I was actually shaving. The end result was a comfortable shave which was fairly close on a single pass and zero razor burn.

    I really think it's all coming together. Thanks everyone for putting up with my seemingly basic questions.

  9. #19
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    That's good news. Just remember the idea is not to remove all stubble in one pass but to reduce it over a series of passes.

    Bob
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  10. #20
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Don’t roll your wrist, hold the razor at opposing corners of the tang so one corner, (with the edge facing you on your away stroke, the top corner on the edge side) is in the middle of the thumb pad, the opposing corner, (bottom spine side) is on you index finger.

    Then like flipping a switch with the thumb, flip the razor, by pushing on the corner, like a switch in the direction of the flip. The corner below will now be on top, in the middle of the thumb pad and the razor will gently have landed on the strop. Flip the thumb back the opposite direction at the end of the stroke to return the tang to the corner you started with. If you flip properly the wrist will not move at all and you have complete control of the amount of pressure at the flip.

    If you flip your wrist, you will use too much pressure and slam the razor and possibly the edge onto the strop and can roll or bend the edge. Remember the edge is so fine we cannot see it without about 1,000 X magnification, it does not take much to bend and break it.

    Rolling an edge is just bending it, bend it too much or too many times, it breaks and causes a chip. It can “Roll”/bend at the flip, (biting the strop), flipping while still in forward motion (biting the strop), using too much downward pressure or lifting the spine off the strop while in movement.

    When you flip with your whole wrist, even if stopped you can still have forward movement with the rolling action of the wrist. When done properly with the thumb, only the thumb and the razor move, the wrist does not.

    The strop does not have to be super taught, as long as you don’t apply downward pressure on the razor.

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