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Thread: Budget beginner
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12-03-2015, 10:01 PM #11
Budget beginner
What's your overall starter budget cause your going to need at least a razor and strop to get started. Typically most guys go brush and soap also. So that's two larger investments and two smaller ones. If we have a better idea of your overall budget might be easier.
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12-04-2015, 02:16 AM #12
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Thanked: 481This. If I had to do it over again with a smaller budget, I'd probably have gone with a sight unseen whipped dog razor. Probably would've made the same strop, bowl, and brush choices, but for my needs a whipped dog probably would do me just as well as the new razor I bought while costing half as much.
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12-04-2015, 02:55 PM #13
I haven't heard anyone who has purchased one say they didn't like the quality of their Whipped Dog Sight Unseen. I emailed half a dozen messages with Larry. He took my skill level [ total straight Newb ] and the ideas I had about what I wanted into account. Being "Sight Unseen" means you won't know what it looks like until it arrives. It will be honed and stropped to an acceptable edge.
It may not be beautiful, but as your first tool it will work as well as most. Certainly better than razors sold by unknowledgeable ebayers.
Even Brand named New razors will need honing in most cases.
So watch the classified section here. By Peer Review folks here have great standards, and know what a true "Shave Ready" razor is. You get an itchy trigger finger, look up Whipped Dog!To deobfuscate is to convert something that is difficult to un͝d̡͝e҉͞r̴͝st̨̕a͘͢n̢̛d̕̕ ̧͝
into one that is simple, understandable and straightforward.
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12-04-2015, 03:00 PM #14
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Thanked: 3795
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12-04-2015, 03:03 PM #15
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Thanked: 3795For the OP, please understand what a $30 razor involves. You are basically paying for a honing and restoration job and a razor is thrown in for free.
Yes, cheap razors can be had, but the guy selling it to you either bought it online, and paid something for the razor and the shipping, or he traveled around to antique stores, again paying for the razor as well as gas and time. A razor in the classifieds has been cleaned up, honed, and tested. It also has been photographed so that you can see exactly what you are buying. All of those things take TIME.
That should be worth a few dollars more than a random razor.Last edited by Utopian; 12-04-2015 at 03:08 PM.
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12-04-2015, 05:39 PM #16
Another budget tip for a brush and soap would be try the 3 pc. Van Der Hagen set that consist of a brush, lathering bowl and a puck of decent soap, you can pick up higher quality stuff later. You can buy this set for roughly $10 at usually Walmart, maybe CVS or online at eBay. I still occasionally use the boar brush, lathering bowl and soap I purchased years ago.
"If You Knew Half of What I Forgot You Would Be An Idiot" - by DoughBoy68
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12-07-2015, 12:06 AM #17
I would also have to recommend whipped dog. Got a sight unseen a little over a week ago. It's not much to look at but that doesn't bother me. It's got it where it counts, the edge. I will say being a complete noob to a sr it was the best option for me being on a limited budget.
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12-07-2015, 02:12 AM #18
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- Nov 2015
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Thanked: 1Thanks for all the advice. Iv decided to pull the trigger on a whipped Dog setup for now. Figure I'd get everything for about a 100 dollars which is where I wanted to be at w everything included. I'm sure I'll be buying more razors to come but we shall see how this goes. Iv already put my sights on some dubl Ducks.. So who knows maybe I'll reward myself later with another purchase.