CAVEAT: I am beginner who is just beginning to get close shaves at the chin. I haven't cut myself there yet. (but there is plenty of time left for that to happen)

I will assume you have a truly sharp razor. This is a perfect reason to play with a shavette. IF your razor's edge is lacking ATG on the chin will tell you really quickly.


The principal cause of chin troubles is the constantly changing angles. Whatever direction neck up, lip down, or side to side the razor has to move in some kind of arc to follow the contour and it is really easy to get the angle too high which will stall out your razor. The good news is your stroke is nicely controlled as you are stopping before the blood shows.

One possible avenue of attack which has worked for me is lay the blade flat against the skin(the spine touching the neck) and move the razor slowly but deliberately into the whiskers as you bring the spine up. By saying "spine up" I mean no more than two spine thicknesses from the skin. Try it with a butter knife first. What you are trying to locate is the angle where your whiskers will give up to the blade and no higher. With practice that angle with become muscle memory in your hand and you can then concentrate on the motion of the stroke. NO pressure against the skin the stroke is like you are just wiping the lather off.

I am a beginner but I am finally getting some BBS results on my chin by using a very sharp razor, very low angle (in my case against the skin), and keeping the skin stretched to force the whiskers above the flesh.

It is similar to shaving the chin with a DE. If you get the blade angle too high it will either scrape the skin causing burn or catch the hair. If your pass is WTG and it stalls against the hair the razor can jump and cut the spot where it lands. If your pass is ATG and the angle gets too high the blade will follow to the skin and dig in. If you haven't gotten cut working at this it demonstrates a good grip and control of your razor. Persevere you will succeed.

It just keeps getting better.