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Thread: Razor Dulling & Stropping
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04-06-2022, 03:35 PM #1
I give my razor 40 on flax and 40 on English Bridal leather after my shave and 60 on Herringbone cotton and 100 on Buffalo leather before I use it again.
- - Steve
You never realize what you have until it's gone -- Toilet paper is a good example
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04-06-2022, 04:53 PM #2
What is my next step to take if I suspect I may have been too aggressive with pressure on the razor while stropping? Does it need to go back to a finishing stone or would many light passes on a strop bring the edge back?
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04-06-2022, 07:44 PM #3
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Thanked: 13234In general any damage caused by incorrect stropping can be fixed by proper stropping, there are exceptions of course
Place the strop flat on the edge of a table
Do 50 perfect even smooth laps on the Linen
Do 100 perfect even smooth laps on the Leather
Shave and hopefully smile at your accomplishments"No amount of money spent on a Stone can ever replace the value of the time it takes learning to use it properly"
Very Respectfully - Glen
Proprietor - GemStar Custom Razors Honing/Restores/Regrinds Website
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04-07-2022, 03:17 AM #4
Stick with it Kyle. There is a lot of information, I know but take the responses and PMs and read them over and over carefully. You have gotten good advice already. Just take some time to digest and process it. Then just figure out how to put it into practice. It is frustrating at first but it gets easier with time. All of a sudden it begins to click and then things start to come together. Use a couple of those other razors to get you through. You need to figure out what grinds, points and finishes/edges you like anyway. Once you get the stropping down things will level off quickly.
Last edited by PaulFLUS; 04-07-2022 at 03:20 AM.
Iron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17
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04-07-2022, 12:11 PM #5
Thanks for the advice and encouragement fellas! I spent my free time last night stropping away at a couple of razors, and snuck in a test shave. It looks like some good progress has been made to the Imperial EHG by putting the strop on a table edge instead of hanging. Stropping like this is like black magic to me....you can't see a change, and you can't hear much going on, but it IS making a change to the edge. Crazy. Got my first strop nick though, but it's not too bad. It's toward the handle end, and mostly avoidable, but one of these nights I'll get out some sandpaper and smooth it out. I'll look into softer alternatives than canvas, like the Herringbone mentioned.
Last edited by lazyMlazyK; 04-07-2022 at 12:29 PM.
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04-07-2022, 12:35 PM #6
Great to hear...the progress that is, not the nick. Remember, to begin with, don't even worry about the blade flip. Just go one stroke, stop, flip gently and reverse. The muscle memory takes a while. It seems sophomoric but it really is true. Think of learning to play guitar or any stringed instrument. You have to learn chords and other techniques but the biggest hurdle is coordinating your hands and your brain.
Do yourself a favor and get a stick of green chrome oxide and make the pasted strop we talked about. That will help a ton at maintaining those edges. That Imperial Extra Hollow is a great shaver with a Thuringian edge and you should be able to keep it really crisp for a long time maintaining it that wayIron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17
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04-07-2022, 03:34 PM #7
The nicks I put into my strop while I was learning have been fixed, I'm still using it daily.
I put a small amount of contact glue under the flap and pressed it down resonably firmly (with a bottle or something similar) but not so hard that it dents the leather. I used one end of a jade roller that I use for my face because it's stays nice and cold (the other end for my face).
That made a nice tight glue down and no big lump where the glue is.
I then wiped off the excess from the strop and when it was dry I used a block or wrapped the bottle etc with fine w/d to make it smooth.
I did go over the whole strop gently so i didn't just have sanded spots.
I then wiped the strop with a damp cloth to get the sanding dust off it.
Then palm rubbed to get a bit of oil on it after it was dry.
I'm sure there are much better methods but this is mine and it works for me.
I had to fix that strop a few times, still do but very occasionally now.- - Steve
You never realize what you have until it's gone -- Toilet paper is a good example