Results 11 to 14 of 14
Thread: First shave ever.
-
11-27-2011, 11:01 PM #11
- Join Date
- Aug 2011
- Location
- Harbert, MI
- Posts
- 431
Thanked: 40Try this with the williams soap. Before you get in the shower put hot water in the shaving mug (with the williams) along with the brush. This will help when you try to make lather. I usually swirl the brush for about two minutes before I apply it to my face. Make sure you wet your face and neck to prevent the williams from drying too quickly. After lathering I strop my razor, the time it takes to strop will give your face time to moisten, and then I start to shave. Work on your stretching of the skin and angle of the blade and you should get a better shave.
-
11-27-2011, 11:02 PM #12
- Join Date
- Jun 2010
- Location
- Brisbane/Redcliffe, Australia
- Posts
- 6,380
Thanked: 983G'day Weldor, there's no harm in taking it slowly to start with, it's the best way. Work on getting the whole face done WTG only for now and finish the job with whatever you choose. You've started with sideburns only, so when you get comfortable with that, slowly increase the area you do WTG. When you are comfortable with doing the whole face add a XTG, followed by ATG using the same 'start small and build up' method. It will take some time but in the end you will be getting a nice clean shave.
My own personal method was actually just to put away my other shaving tools and shave everyday with just the cut-throat both WTG and ATG. By the end of two months I was getting satisfactory results that have only improved with time. I don't go for a complete BBS, but I get so close to it, that I just don't care. A damn Fine Shave (DFS) every second day is all I do, now that I have my technique down, and I can wave my custom 8/8 around my face in quick time without putting myself or others in any danger of harm.
Take it slow and be patient, finish off with what you normally use for now, is perhaps the best advice though. Everyone is different so go at it as you feel is best for your learning progression and facial comfort. Facial comfort being the key crucial factor here.
Mick
-
11-27-2011, 11:17 PM #13
OK this tells me that much of the set of shaving tricks are
still to be discovered.
You are on the right track.
You mentioned making a lather and not having to shave
i.e. practice the lather steps... I often recommend exactly
this. "lathering" is a learned skill. You have to learn how
and learn what you like. One hint is to use one of the
dollar store egg timers (sand type) to make sure you take
a full three min with wet lather on your whiskers and also
take enough time to build a tight lather that works for you.
For me I splash clear water on my face and start loading
my brush with soap. Then splash more clear water on
my face. When the lather begins to pull together on the
brush I try some on my face and switch from mug lathering
to face+mug lathering adding water one dribble at a time.
If I take the full three min I get a better shave. Note that
I can make a durn fine lather in 30 seconds but that is only
part of "latherin".
Another trick is to have a touchstone safety net standard
razor. Some here use a double edge razor and a favorite
brand of blade. I am cheep as heck and recommend the
yellow handle BiC razor for sensitive skin. You can graduate
to a DE and Feather blades if your whiskers are tough enough
that a BiC cannot give you one or two shaves. I am lucky
if I get three OK shaves so I no longer try for four with a BiC.
The blade in a BiC is just OK not good not bad. The razor has
a wide gap that helps it rinse clean. The single blade avoids the
extreme close shaves that multi-blade razors give so at the
same time it avoids the multi-blade rash problems. This will let
you concentrate on "latherin" and face prep with a minimum
expense.
We often find folk that use too much pressure and forget
to pull in a clean straight line giving themselves nicks
and a rash. By holding a BiC with thumb+finger at the last 1/4"
of the handle furthest from from the blade it is difficult to press too hard
and easy to shave in a nice no slice straight line. This
light touch is what you want no mater which blade you select.
This is the best way I know to demonstrate/ teach a light touch.
It uses much the same thumb and finger grip that a straight uses.
Not exactly but closer than holding a tossable with a white knuckle fist.Last edited by niftyshaving; 11-28-2011 at 12:26 AM.
-
11-28-2011, 08:24 AM #14
- Join Date
- Jun 2010
- Location
- Brisbane/Redcliffe, Australia
- Posts
- 6,380
Thanked: 983Personally I likes me a good bit 'o' dirt in my water...That clear stuff is for sissies!
Mick