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Thread: Help!
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02-25-2009, 10:18 PM #1
Although it may be caused by improper stropping, a lot of shaving has to do with the angle in which you hold the razor to your face. If you have the angle off, it won't cut very well, and will tend to pull and be uncomfortable. Just try to keep a 30 degree angle relative to your face, a good rule of thumb is that the spine should be 2 spine-widths away from your face when shaving.
There are a lot of factors (i.e. stropping, shaving technique, etc.) in straight razor shaving, and with more practice you'll know what factor to blame if something goes wrong!
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02-26-2009, 03:10 PM #2
There was ways to examine the edge to see if rolling has occured to bad stropping. I'd see what suggestions everyone has about examining the edge before you send it out in the mail. The razors can be fine and you'll be sending out for no reason.
The #1 thing I have found while learning how to shave with a straight is that the razor, or stropping, or the honing is the first thing to be blamed. My first razor is a Wapi I bought from Ken at Ruprazor and I couldn't shave with it. I thought the honing was bad, that the razor sucked, that MAYBE ken wasn't as skilled as they say he is,etc.
Two weeks later I am getting near BBS shaves with the straight. It was ALL MY FAULT, I didn't know what I was doing. Angle is the biggest problem for me while I am learning. It can make or break the shaves, and cause cuts on your face. When it's all said and done you'll blame everything else but yourself for not knowing how to use the razor.
I would check out the blade edge, strop it about 50 times (Watch videos and make sure you do it right) and then practice with the razor. Your angle and stretching can be way off and then you're not going to get any kind of shave out of it.
Click on HELP files on the top of the page here. There will be a 40 page booklet with photos on how to shave with a straight. I forgot the member who made it, but it saved me big time.
Learning how to use a straight where it actually cuts your beard is HARD.Last edited by Disburden; 02-26-2009 at 03:16 PM.
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02-26-2009, 03:24 PM #3
When you say you are shaving with a Feather are you referring to a Feather in a DE or a straight with a replaceable blade ? If it is the latter then I would say shaving technique isn't the issue. I've never shaved with a Feather straight but I hear they are unforgiving of lapses in technique.
I would suggest sending your razors out to Lynn or gssixgun for honing and in the meantime practice stropping with a butter knife or your Feather.Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.