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Thread: Back to life
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10-03-2009, 04:52 PM #1
- Join Date
- Oct 2009
- Location
- Madrid, Spain
- Posts
- 84
Thanked: 3Back to life
Dear friends,
About 15 years ago I tried to start shaving myself with a straight razor. I bought a kit and had no success in the attempt: lack of information, newbie and some cuts made me forget it.
After all these years, I wanna try again. So, I will let you know about my remaining kit and hesitations for you to help me.
Regarding the razor, I am very happy with my venerable Filarmónica Sello Oro 13, an old Spanish quality razors maker that I think that has already disappeared. I must take it to be sharpened by a dedicated sharpener. Once it is perfect, I won't need to do it again for a long time. It will be enough to be kept with the strop and maybe a stone. I also own this stone. I can remember it was a good quality and pricey one.
I still have a merely new strop that was only [wrongly] used once or twice spreading the original Filarmónica softener paste on one of its sides. So, the other one is still brand new and clean. I think that using a good fine grain diamond paste (0,1) on one side might be enough to keep it sharpened. I don't want to mess with different grain sizes and strops if I can avoid it. On the clean side I would prepare the razor for the pasted side. Is this strop better or worse than the leather hanging one? Is it a proper plan? I guess that the paste I currently have must be in bad conditions after 15 years or so in a [dry] box.
I want to do the things the best I can but do not make it too unnecessarily complicated and difficult. If one paste is enough for a good result, I prefer to simplify. If this stone is only for skilled sharpeners, I prefer to take it to the shop every now and then. If with this two sides strop can manage it all, that's what I want. In other words, i want to find a balance between effectiveness and simplicity.
Look forward to your concerns, corrections and suggestions.
Regards.
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10-03-2009, 05:00 PM #2
welcome to srp
you can strop the razor on the clean side, that's not for preparation, it's for final stropping before the edge goes on your face. i am not familiar with that paste, but if it's abrasive you need to get it out completely from the leather before putting in a finer abrasive, it's not too easy and i wouldn't bother.
your hone is quite good, it's belgian combination hone, and you probably want to lap it for good measure, just to be sure. but you don't need to wory about hones and abrasives for a while.
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10-03-2009, 08:12 PM #3
- Join Date
- Aug 2009
- Location
- Waynesboro, PA
- Posts
- 997
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Thanked: 199Welcome back to straights!
Looks like you made some fine choices in equipment when you purchased them years ago!
I'm sure you will enjoy them, and if not, I'd be glad to take em off your hands
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10-03-2009, 08:28 PM #4
- Join Date
- Oct 2009
- Location
- Madrid, Spain
- Posts
- 84
Thanked: 3
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10-03-2009, 10:31 PM #5
You have some excellent equipment there my friend… or should I say "premium equipment" for straight shaving.
Now all you need is the patience and will to put them to work.
Most razor manufacturers would sell razors that were sharp, that is, it could cut you if you rubbed it the wrong way. But they were never “shaving sharp” out the box so the customer would have to sharpen it before it could be used to shave…. In comes the hone.
If you want to go this the hard way you could hone it your self, however it is easier to have someone who knows what he is doing sharpen the razor with the hone for you, then all you need to do is strop the razor on the clean side of the strop before each shave. At some point, the clean side will not sharpen the edge like it once did, so you use the pasted side to bring the edge back, then the clean side again before each shave to keep the edge sharp (you don’t use the pasted side often). Depending on your type of whiskers, this “cycle” would be good for a few months (or longer) before it will need to visit the hone again.
If you prefer to hone it your self at that time then you will most likely use the yellow side of the hone to re-sharpen the razor, then strop on the clean side of the strop and you should be good for another few months (or longer). However as advised in a previous post you may need to lap the hone before you hone the razor. Get yourself some 1000 grit wet/dry sandpaper and a perfectly flat surface such as a sheet of glass or kitchen counter top, put the paper on the flat surface and sprinkle some water and rub the stone until the stone’s surface is nice and smooth, do this to both sides of the hone.
There are plenty of posts on honing, stropping, and lapping in the Wiki here are a few links... please give them a read through before you do anything, and don't be afraid to ask about anything that's not clear to you... we are all more than happy to help:
Beginner's guide to straight razor shaving - Straight Razor Place Wiki
Category:Straight Razor Maintenance - Honing & Stropping - Straight Razor Place Wiki
Interestingly, I cannot find any reference to your strop in the Wiki, however if I am not mistaken, your strop is what’s called a “paddle strop” and the principle of use is the same, so give this link about hanging strops a read through.
Razor stropping - Straight Razor Place Wiki
I hope this helps my friend.Last edited by smythe; 10-03-2009 at 10:35 PM.
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10-03-2009, 10:38 PM #6
Welcome. That is very nice razor. Stay at it and I think you will come to love this style of shaving.
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10-04-2009, 01:03 AM #7
Welcome to SRP! Like you I used a straight 20 years ago, took a break, and now I'm back. This time around it is much more enjoyable, due to the education received here at SRP. Make sure you take a look at the excellent documentation here, especially the Beginners Guide.
Straight Razor Place Wiki:Books/Beginners Guide - Straight Razor Place Wiki
Good luck with your return to straight shaving.
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10-04-2009, 11:11 AM #8
- Join Date
- Oct 2009
- Location
- Madrid, Spain
- Posts
- 84
Thanked: 3Hi, Smythe,
Thanks for your help and kindness. Very clarifying indeed.
I start seeing how it works. I must strop before every shave, touch up with paste once in a while.
Can honing with a stone replace or complement the pasted strop? Can you forget stone honing and let it for the honemeister?
If I decide a pasted stropping to keep the sharpness, should I use different grain size? Diamond perhaps?
I would prefer using a single padded strop with paste on one side and clean on the other to avoid excessiveness in tools and substances.
If not, I would use two leather strops, pasted and clean.
Do you agree?
Regards.
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10-04-2009, 03:47 PM #9
there are many ways to keep the razor sharp. the paste that you have on the strop may be sufficient, or may be not.
since pastes tend to round the bevel if after a while you decide to use the hone you will need to use slurry on it to cut faster.
but as I already said, get your razor sharp and worry about honing later. you already gave up once, may be you'll give up again before your razor needs a touch up.
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10-04-2009, 08:05 PM #10
Welcome to SRP. I am another one who tried straight razor shaving many years ago and gave it up. Through the resources provided by SRP and with the help of the members here I have learned to use and maintain my straight razor. Stick with it and you will too. Lovely razor and hone you have there.
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.