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07-10-2011, 11:13 PM #1
I don't buy it. I've used solely a plain leather roo strop for several months in the past and there's no sign of any extra wear or anything. it's still just as smooth and supple as when I got it.
Bear in mind how fine a razors edge is, the striations in the surface are going to be so minute they'll have no impact in the strop.
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07-10-2011, 11:26 PM #2
I don't exactly know and never seem to have the time to check. What I do know is that the linen has a slight abrasive quality in the razor as evidenced by the residue. In my mind the primary reason behind the linen would be to remove minute amounts of oxidation formed on the edge.
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07-11-2011, 12:14 AM #3
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Thanked: 4I have read something similar, and it makes sense; especially with an eye towards handing down to your children. At any rate, that is my practice - except I have a felt backing, not linen.
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07-11-2011, 02:41 AM #4
I have read the exact same thing. I even saw micro pictures of the edge, after shaving, before the linen, then after the linen, then after the leather, and from what I saw, I'd say the premise is right on. After a shave the edge had some 'teeth' that weren't all even going the same direction. The linen lined them all up again, removing those that would 'break' if not straightened again. Then after the leather the 'saw edge' was smoothed out considerably. So based on that I'd say it was right on.
The same thing I read also said that you shouldn't strop your razor immediately after shaving, but to give it 24-48 hours rest to 'reset' it's own edge partially, then stropping finished the job before the next shave.
That sounded like the best reason in the world to me to get more than a dozen razors!!!
I do give my razors a quick strop after use, to make sure the 'edge' is also dry before I oil and put it away. So I run it 5 or 10 times on the felt, then put it up.
My Opinion only mate!! Take it with a grain of salt. There seems to be many an opinion about it.
Mike-- Any day I get out of bed, and the first thing out of my mouth is not a groan, that's going to be a good day --
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grant9908 (07-11-2011)
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07-11-2011, 03:02 AM #5
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Thanked: 2I'm not being abrasive, so don't take it that way, but you are speaking of several months....but even if you were talking about several years.....the text was speaking of several generations. Don't you feel that maybe you could buy it *just a *little, given that context we're talking 80 years a person, 240 years worth of use. I think I buy it a little, myself
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07-11-2011, 04:40 AM #6
Hahahah The subject of micro teeth has been brought up on here quite a few times... One thing I have learned is that not all the advice agrees with each other, but the end to the means is the same. There is a LOT of literature that says "Micro teeth Good", some say "Micro teeth bad" and the last bit that says "Micro teeth does not exist or has no baring." Where one person says "Yes that is what you are suppose to do" another will say "I have done it the other way for years." It ranks up there with Creams versus Soaps.. and Hanging Versus Paddle strop. I even took one of my razors and stropped the SMEG out of it and put up Macro shots of the blade, and the respective images of the hairs after certain stages of stropping. Honestly keeping to stropping will keep that edge nicely. If you want to know just get ahold of a loop or USB microscope and keep an eye on your edge..
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07-11-2011, 04:49 AM #7
What you've just asked has been batted around probably since linen/leather stropping came to be. Even old barber manuals state both sides of the divide. It is almost as bad as tea party versus liberals. Anyhow, I am a linen/leather guy. If it was good enough for every pro barber I ever went to when I was a kid .... I used to watch fascinated when they stropped their razors .... it is good enough for me.
Here is an interesting thread leading to an interesting article on the topic. When I first came around I based my stropping habits on mparker762's post # 4. Still do, more or less.Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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grant9908 (07-11-2011)
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07-11-2011, 12:28 PM #8
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Thanked: 13234The there a ton of discussion about what linen does and doesn't do
Here is proof that is does remove "something" from the edge whether that is a good thing or not is your decision to make..
This is a used Illinois linen compared to a new one...
That is after probably 1000 razors, anyone that uses a white Linen strop should be able to see the same thing after a year or two..
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grant9908 (07-11-2011)
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07-11-2011, 02:08 PM #9
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Thanked: 2This looks like definitive proof to *me*. I know I was already using linen first every time but that picture sure makes it hard to deny that if I want my son to see use of my strop in 60 years....I better keep using it. Speaking of........
I do about 30 passes on the linen and about 30 passes on the leather. I'm new so.....is that enough? Opinions?....advice?...
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07-11-2011, 02:17 PM #10
I do 50 and 50 because that is what I thought I read in that thread I referred to previously. Going back to it and re-reading it sometime later I saw that I was incorrect. The post I followed said 30 and 50. I still do 50 and 50 because I am used to it and it seems to be working well. I have tried less and, as with most things, I'm happier with more.
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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The Following User Says Thank You to JimmyHAD For This Useful Post:
grant9908 (07-11-2011)