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    barba crescit caput nescit Phrank's Avatar
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    Fantastic, bringing back some great memories on how fun it was to climb that curve, to turn a task into an experience, and one I still absolutely enjoy almost 7 years later.

    Great job, 20 shaves is a definite benchmark, then it becomes easier and easier and you start to further refine your technique to your face, the spots that are trouble, and your own method.

    Has RAD consumed your life yet? :-)

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    STF
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    Quote Originally Posted by Phrank View Post

    Has RAD consumed your life yet? :-)
    I’ve got a feeling I am going to catch RAD from you guy’s, I'm already in the forum most of the day.

    Steve
    - - Steve

    You never realize what you have until it's gone -- Toilet paper is a good example

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    barba crescit caput nescit Phrank's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by STF View Post
    I’ve got a feeling I am going to catch RAD from you guy’s, I'm already in the forum most of the day.

    Steve
    How many razors do you have at this point?

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    STF
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    Quote Originally Posted by Phrank View Post
    How many razors do you have at this point?
    As of right now I have Just one and a shavette for emergencies but Outback has been so amazingly generous and has 2 smilers and a square point in the post to me.

    I will honour his incredible generosity by paying it forward to another beginner as soon as I get a few more of my own.

    Steve
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    You never realize what you have until it's gone -- Toilet paper is a good example

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    Senior Member blabbermouth outback's Avatar
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    Man, that was great.! Flashbacks for sure.!

    Everybody has a +1 to their replies, from me.:

    Angle was the biggest thing I saw wrong, especially ATG. I keep that pass flat on my face, for most parts. Maybe a bit longer working that lather, work more water into it, push its boundaries. It'll make it slicker.! Ya just don't want it running down yer neck.

    Watching you fumble with the razor, figuring out what grip to use, brought back my best memories from ol'.
    Its the curve we've been talking about. Just like life as an infant. You lay on your back till you can sit up. You rock before you crawl. Stand before walk, Now you can run.!

    I have a feeling the three razors I sent you, might be a bit sharper than what your using. But if you keep the blade almost flat to your face, light pressure, you'll be fine.

    They'll give you something to compare your razor to. See if its lost its edge..
    The sample of MdC i sent along should help, with cushion and glide.

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    STF
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    Thank you Mike.
    rolodave, BobH and outback like this.
    - - Steve

    You never realize what you have until it's gone -- Toilet paper is a good example

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  10. #7
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    First relax,

    Strop your razor well on leather to remove any oxidation and to polish the bevel and edge. Check your edge by running a Qtip lightly along the edge, if it snags it needs a touch up. It is not uncommon for a new shaver to use too much pressure while stropping and roll the edge.

    Second, add more water. One of the main purposes of shaving lather is to add water to your beard and face. You can splash water on your face, but it will just run down you neck. Soap makes lather that holds water on your face.

    It is not uncommon for lather to dry out for new shavers. It is ok to re-lather if needed, adding more water and soap. Or make fresh lather.

    Lather as you did in the first part of the video, then either dip your brush into hot water or flick the tip through hot running water, then work the water in the brush into the soap on your face. Keep adding water to make a rich lather.

    Lather is just soap, water and air. Whipping the soap will add water and air to the soap and make lather that will cling to your face and moisten your beard. You can also use a beard prep, with Noxzema or a tube soap to add slickness. Just rub into a wet face while getting your gear together, then lather over the prep soap. I use Trader Joe’s Honey Mango shave cream about $6 a tube. I use a nickel size dollop, it is very slick.

    Third, you are using too steep of an angle, too close to the skin. You must find the angle that works best for your skin and beard, but start out with the angle of the bevel, so that the bevel is riding flat on your skin.

    How much is that angle? About 20 degrees. So, if the razor is perpendicular to your skin, it is 90 degrees, half of that is 45 degrees and half of that is 22 degrees, close enough about a finger width between the spine and skin.

    Using light pressure start below the sideburn and make one continuous stroke from the side burn down to the jaw, one flat smooth, even light stroke. Then do another overlapping stroke, over lapping about a ¼ of the length of the razor. Smooth, even light pressure stroke. Use the heel to shave close to your goatee

    Then starting below the Jaw, do a light stroke from below the turn of the jaw, do the flat part under the jaw and follow along the neck to the bottom of the neck. Leave a small strip, the peak of the jaw unshaved. After you have shaved the flats, cheek and below the jaw and neck, go back and make the curve. Start above the lather on the flat part of the cheek and slowly make the turn so that you maintain the same 20-degree angle with the bevel flat on your skin in a smooth even stroke around the curve of the jaw, or shave sideways from chin to ear. Take your time.

    It is ok to shave the flats with a straight razor for a week or two and do the corner with a double edge or cartridge razor until you are comfortable with the straight razor and with making a thick, slick lather, then ease into shaving the tough spots and going Against the Grain.

    Long smooth strokes are less likely to cut you. Re-lather and do the second pass all over again with the grain. Once you are comfortable shaving with the grain, then try an against the grain stroke, starting with the neck up to the jaw, then above the jaw leaving the point of the jaw for when you have more confidence.

    Your against the grain stroke looks like to high of an angle, (too much gap between the spine and skin). Lower the spine more to the 20 degree. About a finger width from the spine to the skin.

    I do two passes with the grain, and one against the grain, and a water clean-up pass. The clean up pass allows you to shave to your goatee, mustache and sideburns, without the lather obscuring the line. Here you can take short strokes to trim to the line.

    Relax, use a good soap with slick lather, make sure your razor is Shave Ready, make a rich lather, don’t be afraid to re-lather, and use light pressure.

    It just takes time, relax, no bleeding you did good.

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    Senior Member DoughBoy68's Avatar
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    The first time I tried to shave with my left hand (I'm right handed) I cut the crap out of my finger on the hand I was using to stretch the skin, got the scar to prove it...........
    BobH, outback, Gasman and 2 others like this.
    "If You Knew Half of What I Forgot You Would Be An Idiot" - by DoughBoy68

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