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Thread: Newb here. Got Some Questions.
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11-06-2006, 08:06 AM #1
1. Not really, but does require a good sense of feel, developed only by practice.
2. What X said
3. All the strops I have have a snap ring or snap hook on them. I drilled holes in the edge of my bathroom counter and installed eye bolts to hang them from. I have four double sided strops hanging there now and three eye bolts.
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11-06-2006, 09:04 AM #2
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Thanked: 2209I would stress the importance of buying a shave ready razor more than anything else. Many guys have not done that and given up in frustration. Honing is the most difficult of the skills needed and it does take some practice. Just do not practice on your first razor and, no, it is not brain surgery.
Randolph Tuttle, a SRP Mentor for residents of Minnesota & western Wisconsin
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11-06-2006, 03:16 PM #3
1. I'll let you know when I start honing.
2. Ditto to X. Or, when you drop/nick/open a box with/otherwise damage your razor (I wouldn't recommend *any* of these things, by the way) it will absolutely need the hone.
3. I use a heavy-duty mug hook from the hardware store.
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11-06-2006, 09:29 PM #4
like randy said, honing is definitely the hardest part of a lifetime of straight shaving. however, its most definitely learnable with a bit of patience and some time spent practicing. as with all things, good equipment means ease of use and the ability to learn correctly. so when its time to start your honing, buy the right stuff and you will have good quality equipment for a very very long time.
i live in NYC and i'd be happy to teach you how to hone when you get the right equipment.
like others have stated. when the razor starts to pull even though you have did the touch up with the pasted then its time. the pulling you will learn as you get adjusted to shaving.
i hang my strop from the towel rack in my bathroom. i put a piece of leather shoelace or whatever it is around the metal top ring and tied that onto the towel rack. its the right heigth for me. but u could put it anywhere in the bathroom or anywhere else really.
~J
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11-06-2006, 10:28 PM #5
Honing is easy. I've been an Instruction designer for about 9 years now and its not the complexity of the honing that is the problem, its trying to use the Internet as the mechanism for learning.
Those I've taught in person got it really fast, and those that get a Skype session with Randydance seem to get it very fast as well. The video Lynn provides would probably help a lot.
On average the learning curve is about 6 months. For me its been about 3 years. Why I can't tell you. I was ok in my second year but am only now getting what I would call "good" at it. There is a lot of documentation that suggests it takes about 10 years to learn. In that regards I think the Internet has cut the average learning time down tremendously. This site is averaging a six month learning curve which cuts, what, 9 1/2 years off the old time total.
There are several holdups with learning to hone:
Fear that you'll ruin the blade (as if its possible to somehow create a razor that ends up with a spine thinner than the edge)
An unwillingness to apply the right amount of pressure
An unwillingness to buy the right equipment
An unwillingness to learn all the techniques to evaluate an edge
Some preconceived idea of how to hone that ruins your progress (like experience as a knife honer)
An unwillingness to learn to strop correctly (or just an inability; the two actions are interlinked and therefore if you can't strop it impedes your progress on the hone)
Misinterpreting our advice (this occurs either because people only read the posts that sound good, or don't read ALL the info in a post, or can't evaluate the meaning of a group of posts that sound contradictory)
Interpreting advice incorrectly (if I say to do something lightly what does that mean to you?)
Buying the right equipment but not using it correctly (like failing to lap a hone correctly)
Not explaining or evaluating the edge correctly (it seems dull but in fact is overhoned)
Trying to hone an unhoneable razor (like a poor quality steel)
Lack of patience
Misunderstanding the fundamental concept of honing itself (delicately creating ultra fine teeth, bracketed by ultra smooth bevels converging in a straight line along the edge of the blade) Ok, maybe that does sound difficult.
I thought of it this way when I started. It might take me years to learn to hone (it did) but I'd be in the same spot a few years down the line whether I learned to hone or not.Last edited by AFDavis11; 11-06-2006 at 10:39 PM.
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11-06-2006, 10:37 PM #6
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Thanked: 3461. It's not that hard. It took me several weeks until I realized I needed to lap my hone. My next honing session got the razor sharp enough to shave with; it wasn't perfect, but it was shave-worthy. My honing has gotten better since then; I've got a long way to go, but meanwhile I'm pretty happy with my results.
2. What everybody else said.
3. I clip mine on a cord looped around the doorknob.
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11-06-2006, 10:45 PM #7
Originally Posted by AFDavis11
I found that sharpening knives helped me "get it" a lot faster. That's all a razor is, really. You just have to modify your process a bit, with different equipment. It's much more finessed, but the process is very similar. Get a good bevel and polish it.
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11-07-2006, 04:31 AM #8
Thanks for all the info/advice. I went over to thewellshavedgentleman and got a pasted paddle strop along with a hanging strop and the razor that Tony sells. After I let my credit card rest for a while I'll probably pick up a Norton 4k/8k and a cheap razor off of ebay to practice on.
Thanks again. I'll let you guys know how it goes.