Results 1 to 10 of 16
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12-05-2015, 12:56 AM #1
- Join Date
- Nov 2015
- Location
- United States
- Posts
- 138
Thanked: 2The mail man found it. It seems nice.
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12-05-2015, 01:03 AM #2
Looks like he took the shoulder off should of honed up good. Has been honed from the looks of it. Looks good to go. Lather up and give it ago. Remember very light touch. Enjoy and good shaving.
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12-05-2015, 01:09 AM #3
- Join Date
- Nov 2015
- Location
- United States
- Posts
- 138
Thanked: 2Yeah, I remembered what you said to look for and told my wife that he had done it. She took a test stroke on her fine arm hair and was impressed with how much came off in a single pass.
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12-05-2015, 01:10 AM #4
- Join Date
- Nov 2015
- Location
- United States
- Posts
- 138
Thanked: 2Sounds like the strop might have shipped folded. I hope there isn't a crease.
Leather I can handle if I need to go buy a side of Latigo I will. L0L
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12-05-2015, 01:28 AM #5
- Join Date
- Dec 2014
- Location
- Virginia, USA
- Posts
- 2,224
Thanked: 481Looks like it has a nice straight edge. Hope it shaves as good as it looks!
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12-05-2015, 03:26 AM #6
- Join Date
- Apr 2012
- Location
- Diamond Bar, CA
- Posts
- 6,553
Thanked: 3215There are some guys out there that can tune those GDs. Looks like they did a nice job on that one, it can be a bit of work. Sometimes too much work… Those scales are a little wobbly, but should shave if honed properly.
I just honed a pretty nice looking Chinese razor for a guy that has a thick spine, ¾ in blade and just has a China etch on the tang.
It is nicely, evenly ground and finished. It was very hard but took a good edge and shaved well. Time will tell if it will hold an edge, I think it will, did have some clunky scales, though.
I coached the guy on what to look for and showed him some vintage razors. The next day he was sending me pics of vintage razors from an antique store. He bought – stole a nice, wide, clean Joseph Elliot in horn scales. He paid less for the Elliot than the Chinese razor.
He’s hooked…or will be when he shaves with the Elliot, its coming for cleaning and honing.
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12-05-2015, 03:38 AM #7
- Join Date
- Nov 2015
- Location
- United States
- Posts
- 138
Thanked: 2Yeah the scales are cheap but I knew that. I am just scraping my cheeks so I felt like I could go with mixed reviews, cheap price, highly rated seller combo and get something to start me off. Sp far I am happy with it. I might need a better strop, I have some leather scraps downstairs that seem as good or better that the one I got.
I am impressed with how smooth and how little razor burn I have. It's already been nearly an hour.
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12-05-2015, 05:14 AM #8
- Join Date
- Dec 2014
- Location
- Virginia, USA
- Posts
- 2,224
Thanked: 481Off the wall question, but have you done any 'prep' work to your strop yet?Took me a while to stumble across it, but I saw one this forum that it helps to condition it before use. To do this, you wet the strop with a bit of shave soap, wrap some 600 grit sand paper around a glass bottle, and run it over the strop a little. Not so much you wear the color off it, but enough to give it a nice grippy feel. My strop is getting a bit burnished, might be time to retreat it now that I think about it.
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12-05-2015, 05:19 AM #9
- Join Date
- Nov 2015
- Location
- United States
- Posts
- 138
Thanked: 2
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12-05-2015, 09:47 AM #10
What info do you have on the strop? Most need nothing but some hand rubbing to break them in.