Results 11 to 19 of 19
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07-07-2011, 08:07 AM #11
+1 to what mjhammer says.
My stropping technique has gotten so much better since I tried his method of placing the strop on a bench/firm surface and using a light touch.
I also went the other way and have a full hollow in my rotation. I find it more difficult to shave with, however, it has honed (?) my technique as well and made shaves with the other razors easier. FWIW
Most importantly, don't get discouraged and enjoy the ride on the learning curve.
Like the shampoo advert says 'It won't happen overnight but it will happen'
Finally - welcome to SRPHang on and enjoy the ride...
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The Following User Says Thank You to Havachat45 For This Useful Post:
souriya (07-16-2011)
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07-16-2011, 03:30 AM #12
- Join Date
- Jun 2011
- Location
- Lake Charles, LA
- Posts
- 6
Thanked: 0Wow I did not know that there were so many posts to this thread. The forum did not notify me after the second response.
Thanks everyone for your encouragement and advice.
I ordered a Norton 4000/8000 hone but opened the box to find out that I accidentally ordered the 1000/4000 instead, so disappointing. I was looking forward to honing for the first time to see if I can get better shaves. I guess I'll have to wait a week for the real hone to get here.
However, I am glad to report that I tried Thiers Issard Strop Paste today and it improved the shave, less catching and tugging on the hair. This adds to my suspicion that I ruined the edge with the strop when I got the razor and I need to correct it with a hone. The closeness is better, but not what I have been able to achieve with a Mach 3. The result is similar to what I get with an electric razor.
Also I saw on YouTube there is a fellow in Denmark who did a shaving video and he said something I never heard before "Use short, quick strokes as if you're chopping the hairs instead of trying to slowly push the razor through the hair." I tried it and that also improved the shave but it feels unsafe to be slinging the blade around like that.
I'll give another update after my first hone in a week or two. Thanks again everyone!
Souriya
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07-16-2011, 03:37 AM #13
Good advise from carazor, go to a barber and you'll get an advise face to face. im sure you'll get an idea to solve the problem
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07-16-2011, 03:59 AM #14
To start I would recomend short SLOW strokes. Fast will only give you a large Cut!
I think that was Maxi on the vid. Was he bald?
Hold the razor with the spine almost flat to the skin then lift it slightly. Do just the strong side side of face. Get the angle right. Hold the razor lightly enough that if it catches the movement on the face stops. Otherwise large cut and pink lather are the result. Ouch!"We sleep soundly in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm."
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The Following User Says Thank You to Str8Shooter For This Useful Post:
souriya (07-17-2011)
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07-16-2011, 12:00 PM #15
I have only been at this for six months but experienced the same pulling and tugging when I started out. The first week was awful. Lots of blood and very little hair cut. I didn't try my chin area for at least the first four weeks.
My longtime local barber gave me the best advice, "Keep the angle really low and do very short, choppy strokes rather than long strokes." It really helped to move my technique forward.
Remember:
- Make sure you do adequate shave preparation.
- Make sure your razor is sharp. In the beginning, use a professionally sharpened razor and avoid honing and stropping until you have more experience.
- Make sure to start with WTG passes on the cheek and sideburns until it becomes second nature. Finish up with a DE or your normal shaving method.
- Make sure to use short strokes in the beginning.
I wish you luck. If you stay with it, it will get easier and better.
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The Following User Says Thank You to DLB For This Useful Post:
souriya (07-17-2011)
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07-16-2011, 02:01 PM #16
+1 on what theBigSpender said - no matter how course it is, no facial hair is a match for a properly sharpened razor that is used with proper technique.
I grew up going to the same barber for over 25 years so I trusted him completely. Right around the age of 28 curiosity got the better of me and I asked for shave (I always saw him using a straight on customers). He said, "I can do it but you'll bleed. Your beard is too thick and course. I'd just stick with a cartridge razor if I were you." So I listened to him.
Fast forward to 18 months ago (12 years since his comment). My curiosity never died - instead it grew. So I thought, 'screw it, I'm going to give it try. Guys had nothing to shave with but straights for centuries and I'm sure thousands upon thousands of them had course facial hair.' I bought a shave-ready straight and gave it go. Not the greatest shave the first time around but not bad either - nowhere near as uncomfortable as I had expected and certainly no blood (not even weepers) as my old barber had implied.
Within 4-6 weeks I was getting very good shaves with only my neck - where the hairs grow toward my ear making it hard to go with the grain, especially in the hollow areas around the adam's apple - experiencing a slight bit of irritation / razor burn.
Within 6 months even my neck was no longer an issue and the shave were great.
That said, your two biggest factors are most likely going to be the razor edge and (e.g. well honed) edge and pressure (all it takes is enough to keep the razor resting on your skin, no more).
Bottom line: Listen to all the great advice that's been given here already and you'll get it - and probably quicker than you think. Once you find the right mix of razor prep, facial prep, and shaving technique for YOU, those hairs won't stand a chance.John
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The Following User Says Thank You to Malacoda For This Useful Post:
souriya (07-17-2011)
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08-07-2011, 02:48 AM #17
- Join Date
- Jun 2011
- Location
- Lake Charles, LA
- Posts
- 6
Thanked: 0I finally got the Norton 4000/8000 and it took forever to lap. Halfway thru, I discover that my new lapping stone needs to be lapped. I went and got a granite tile then sanded the stones flat like that SRP wiki showed. To hone, I used the pyramid technique on Lynn Abrams DVD, except I had to do a lot more laps. My new Dovo has an asymmetric transverse spine on one side that makes me choose if I want the spine flat on the stone, or the edge flat on the stone, but I couldn't have both at the same time. I ground the spine's left side flatter, more parallel to the edge. I got a cheap pocket microscope from RadioShack and I can see the edge progression from 4k to 8k. 8k still leaves some jaggedness to the edge that is observable at 100x magnification and stropping didn't seem to smooth it out.The shave was better than before I honed, but it's still not smooth nor close so now I'm waiting on UPS for 12k stone and some .5 CrO. Hopefully that equipment will enable me to get a satisfactory edge, although I've read that some folks say "don't get anything finer than 8k grit until you've learned to get a perfect dream shave from the 8k"
I think I will also stop using the linen strop. The webbing is so tight with prominent weaves, it feels like I'm rubbing the blade over a cobblestone street. I imagine that edge getting clobbered by lumps of linen and metal chunks breaking off the edge, turning it into visible serrations.
While I wait for all the moons to line up for a nice edge on my dovo, I've been practicing with a cheap shavette-type razor I got at a local barber beauty supply store. It uses DE blades that I cut in half. It shaves fine, I would skip the expense of getting all this junk to make my Dovo shave, but the shavette is so flimsy and plus I can't upgrade to a fancy impressive looking straight razor if I can't get a no frills one to shave. Those Harts and Thiers Issards look so purdy, I'd like to have one someday, but only if I can remove my beard with it. I can't drop all that cash just to have a slab of metal and scales sitting around doing nothing but gleaming. Stuff in my house gotta earn their keep.
Thanks for your advice everyone, I'll keep y'all posted on my progress and maybe a newbie will see all the junk I'm going through and peek at what they might be in for.
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08-16-2011, 10:44 PM #18
- Join Date
- Jun 2011
- Location
- Lake Charles, LA
- Posts
- 6
Thanked: 0Golly gee willakers. I finally got a good snag-free smooth shave on my Dovo. I'd like to thank the SRP members & wiki, Lynn Abrams DVD, Vintage Blades LLC, and YouTube, I couldn't have done it without you.
What finally brought the edge to shave ready after the Norton 8k was a light touch of Thiers Issard paste on denim stapled taut to a pine board from the hobby store followed by a hint of Hand American chromium on a leather strop like on that SRP wiki, and finally the plain leather strop.
The sound and feel of beard being painlessly sheared off my face was surreal, like this moment was elusive as an oiled hog and I finally grabbed it by the squiggly tail.
I'm still lapping that Oriental 12k stone, it'll take a few thousand more strokes so it won't be ready anytime soon but I'm curious about the effect it will have on the edge when I throw it into the hone line up.
Looking forward to the next shave to see if I can keep that edge.
Woohoo!
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I am here: http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=30.201860,-93.236866
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08-16-2011, 11:02 PM #19