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  1. #1
    Senior Member gfoster's Avatar
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    Default I put the feather in the drawer

    Got Tony's strops in the mail and had a go at stropping up my three (three? What the heck) razors. I put the feather in the drawer and did a proper shave today.

    I decided to try the W&B I bought from eBay. I could tell it wasn't as sharp as the dovo Tony sent me in the starter kit but I wanted to try it. Damn thing wasn't sharp enough at ALL, kept tugging and pulling and on my 2nd pass I still had stubble standing.

    So I pulled out the little 4/8 kronpunkt I traded from Gary. Wow, that thing is like a little ferarri compared to the feather. It zipped all over my face snip snip snipping away. Got a nice smooth shave (not as close as the feather, though) with it.

    I have to say shaving with the feather has helped me learn to be careful and to learn the correct motions but a proper straight does feel different. I had to use a LOT more pressure on the blade, with the feather if you press down you're going to cut yourself pretty much... so I'd almost actually "lift" the blade a little as I was using it. With the regular straight I had to unlearn that habit.

    My question is this... I have a pasted paddle strop from Tony with .5, 1 and 3 micron grits (his recommendations). I'm working on the Wade and Butcher to get it to be comfortably sharp instead of the condition it's currently in, so how much and how many passes would you guys recommend on the different grits? I tried about 10 passes on the 3 micron, then 15 on the 1 and 20 on the .5 (then stropped it on the leather for 30) and it made a marked improvement, but the toe and heel areas are still a bit duller than the center part (so I've been concentrating on those).

    BTW Gary, thanks for the kronpunkt, I honestly didn't think I'd like the size (it comes across as almost dainty and my fiancee called it "cute") but it works around my moustache and goatee really well and it is quite comfortable.

    Oh, NO CUTS, NO NICKS. Woohoo!

    -- Gary F.

  2. #2
    Senior Member Tony Miller's Avatar
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    Gary,
    Dull razors, like many found on eBay can vary quite a bit I have had many that responded very will to a pasted strop but I do think the majority of well used, truely dull razors are better candidates for honing instead.

    On an eBay find I may use 30-40 passes on either 9, 6 or 3 micron before going to the fine touch-up pastes. This is why I feel a variety of tools are needed is you are going to persue all aspects of this. For new, out of the box razors you need far less, for nicked projects you need an arsenal of stones. For most a hanging strop, a pasted paddle and a Norton will cover 95% of what's out there. A well chosen selection of barber hones will work too.

    Tony
    The Heirloom Razor Strop Company / The Well Shaved Gentleman

    https://heirloomrazorstrop.com/

  3. #3
    Senior Member robertlampo's Avatar
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    [QUOTE=gfoster] It zipped all over my face snip snip snipping away. Got a nice smooth shave (not as close as the feather, though) with it.

    I have to say shaving with the Feather has helped me learn to be careful and to learn the correct motions but a proper straight does feel different. I had to use a LOT more pressure on the blade, with the feather if you press down you're going to cut yourself pretty much... so I'd almost actually "lift" the blade a little as I was using it. With the regular straight I had to unlearn that habit.[QUOTE=gfoster]



    I couldn't agree with you more, Gary. The Feather does teach you to use a light touch. Nothing cuts my beard as close but then again, there are no nicks with my conventionals compared to the Feather. Yes, I'm an advocate for the Feather but I like to use all my razors. My Feather will always be special to me because before my Feather purchase, I spent a half hour on the phone with Ray Dupont and we talked about str8 shaving. He sold me my Feather, my first str8. I've been hooked on this hobby ever since.

    -Rob

  4. #4
    Knife & Razor Maker Joe Chandler's Avatar
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    So you ready to swap that Feather, Gary?

  5. #5
    MOD and Giveaway Dude str8razor's Avatar
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    Default Feather razor

    Well I have to ask.......................
    I have been looking at Feather razors on CS.com just for the sake of looking. The blade looks "similar" to a straight razor's blade. The blades look expensive? Do you strop and hone these blades or just remove them and replace them? Can they be stropped and honed? I understand that they are really sharpe and one must use light pressure while using one. The web site indicates that you can get 7 to 10 shaves from one blade, and then you throw it away????
    if anything has been abnormal for a long enough period it then becomes normal.

  6. #6
    Senior Member blabbermouth rtaylor61's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by str8razor
    Well I have to ask.......................
    I have been looking at Feather razors on CS.com just for the sake of looking. The blade looks "similar" to a straight razor's blade. The blades look expensive? Do you strop and hone these blades or just remove them and replace them? Can they be stropped and honed? I understand that they are really sharpe and one must use light pressure while using one. The web site indicates that you can get 7 to 10 shaves from one blade, and then you throw it away????
    Bill,

    Feathers use disposable blades. Chris Moss suggests that he gets about 2 weeks from each blade. I may break down and buy one someday, but having used one for a week, I prefer the traditional straight razor and my de razors to the Feather. YMMV!

    RT

  7. #7
    Senior Member dennisthemenace's Avatar
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    I'm kind of intrigued by the Feather str8s. But it seems a LOT of money for basically a handle and metal blade holder. Anyone know WHY they're so expensive? Is it just whatever the market will bear?

  8. #8
    Member AFDavis11's Avatar
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    Yes, and they are good razors. Straight users are willing to pay for a good shave and high quality product. Most guys just get tired of honing. Its far better than most of the disposable alternatives. Personally though, I hated the thing.

  9. #9
    Senior Member dennisthemenace's Avatar
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    Alan, Thanks for the input. After shaving w/ the Imperial I rec'vd from Lynn the other day, I can't imagine shaving w/ a sharper str8 than that one. It was an incredibly comfortable shave. The feathers sound so sharp as to be scary.

  10. #10
    Senior Member robertlampo's Avatar
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    I agree with Alan that the Feathers are made very well and that the market does dictate price, which is the case with all products we purchase. The weight of the Feather is indicative of its quality. Even holding it and opening the blade tells you that this isn't a cheapie. I know I ramble a lot about my Feather, but I still haven't found anything that cuts through my beard as easily as the Feather. But there's a cost - nicks do occur more frequently than with my conventionals.

    So why do I use both conventionals and the Feather? I really enjoy the stropping/honing aspect of the conventionals. It feels good to hone a blade, strop it, and get a great shave. I like the Feather because of its weight (although I do own two very heavy str8's) as well as it's insanely keen edge.

    It's all good.

    -Rob
    Last edited by robertlampo; 05-22-2006 at 05:52 AM.

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