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06-18-2012, 06:36 PM #1
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Location
- North Idaho Redoubt
- Posts
- 27,026
- Blog Entries
- 1
Thanked: 13245Beginners Tips: June 2012 (5 Year Retrospect)
Well my friends yesterday was 5 years on SRP for me, and here either today, or tomorrow will be 15,000 posts..
So a little retrospect I thought was in order..
I started using a straight razor 31 years ago this month, I was taught how to use one, and how to maintain one from my Barber, David in Denver Colorado when I grew my very first beard at the age of 22.. David explained that in order to keep nice straight lines and to keep a beard groomed correctly you need a straight edge... I loved it as I could actually shave more than twice a week and not get angry skin from it.. I managed to keep two razors shaving for the next 20+ years with an Illinois strop and a very very fine Arkansas stone. About the time we moved to Idaho in 2002 was when I dropped and destroyed my last straight, so for the next few years I tried everything you can imagine to keep neat, clean, and groomed.. My skin rebelled and I threw in the towel with all the BS gizmos, told the wife thats it I am going back to a Straight Razor.. I marched myself out to the shop and up into the loft and dug through the storage boxes until I found my old strop and my old stone..
This was about Dec 2006 - Jan 2007, so armed and dangerous, I started with Google I found a few razors on e-bay, my first purchase was a Wostenholm Pipe, after that I wasted money on a Fillarmonica #10
I fixed up the Pipe and got it shaving and really enjoyed the process, so next I found a 22 razor lot on e-bay and snatched it up, the wife raised an eyebrow at that one, as she knew how I could get from the Gun "Hobby"..
This was somewhere around April or May of 2007 and I decided that I might need a different stone, so I started searching on Google, I found "The Perfect Edge" and after a informative hour long conversation with Howard I ordered a Norton 4/8...
So armed with a new Norton, and a ton of gunsmithing smarts I proceed to carefully take some of my 22 razor lot apart, and being the anal retentive person, I am I had my calipers and my trusty notebook, and measured, checked, and learned, why those smart fellas back in the past did things the way they did..
Tearing things down and re-building them was something I always enjoyed doing and was pretty good at and after all, razors were steel and so were guns I knew how to polish, and I knew how to take my time, so maybe 3 razors into this endeavor I joined SRP on June 17th and started posting.
I learned a bit about honing I did not know, Thanks to Lynn and others like him, I already knew how to maintain my razors, I knew what an X-stroke was, and to hone lightly, but learning to set a bevel was a whole new experience..
IIRC when I joined SRP we had maybe 2800 members, it was a rather tight knit community and so amazingly helpful.. I started hanging out in the old chat room with Jared/Nickelking (RIP brother) and Byron Todd, Doc, Syslight, Hoglahoo and Gugi, we would sit in that old cave and BS for hours...
Sunday night chats started back up, and I got to know Lynn through there, and finally met him and most of the Chat Crazies at the first 2008 NC meetup.. By that time I was hooked and well into honing and restoring...
Over the last 5 years I have never stopped learning, and questioning everything about this hobby, there is always a mystery to solve or chase, it never seems to end.. I think that is what I really love about it, there is always a new challenge, so when you hear the senior members say "This is a journey and not a destination" take that to heart...
Many come here to learn the knowledge to shave, and maintain their razors and move on, others of us have made this into a hobby that we cherish and continue the tradition of helping people get started using a straight razor that is SRP..
In closing this I will go back to a saying that I used to welcome newbies to the forum with
"Welcome aboard the Straight Razor train, may yer ride be long and smooth"
gLast edited by gssixgun; 06-18-2012 at 06:43 PM.
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The Following 17 Users Say Thank You to gssixgun For This Useful Post:
BanjoTom (06-19-2012), bjmacnevin (06-19-2012), Crzylizard (06-18-2012), davemillard (07-18-2012), FiReSTaRT (07-17-2012), Havachat45 (06-19-2012), JoeSomebody (06-18-2012), MWS (06-18-2012), nipper (06-22-2012), PaulKidd (06-19-2012), ReardenSteel (06-19-2012), Speedster (06-19-2012), Theseus (06-20-2012), tjessup (06-21-2012), Tonyletigre (06-18-2012), UKRob (06-19-2012), Yochatman (06-22-2012)
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06-18-2012, 09:09 PM #2
- Join Date
- Jun 2011
- Location
- The North Coast, Ohio
- Posts
- 2,455
Thanked: 146Thank You Glen for your tireless dedication and help for all us newbs. Your honing videos are so very helpful and your patience with the same questions never seems to end. So Thank You sir!
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The Following User Says Thank You to JoeSomebody For This Useful Post:
gssixgun (06-19-2012)
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06-18-2012, 10:56 PM #3
Very well said Glen.
Your experience mirrors the rest of us who have been at this for a time to one extent or another.
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The Following User Says Thank You to thebigspendur For This Useful Post:
gssixgun (06-19-2012)
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06-18-2012, 11:22 PM #4
- Join Date
- Aug 2006
- Location
- Maleny, Australia
- Posts
- 7,977
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Thanked: 1587I remember the day Glen arrived here. The forum had been quiet that day. A little too quiet, if you know what I mean. We were all just sitting around trying to out exclamation mark each other. Mark Avery was winning (as he always did, think that guy had two fingers permanently grafted to shift-1 !!!!!!!!!!), and we were looking for a distraction. Then in walks Glen. You could have heard an apostrophe drop as he unleashed post after post.
And things really haven't changed since then. I'm always amazed at how he keeps coming up with new ideas to be honest - I can only assume there's a lot of time to think during those 10 months of the year he is snow-bound in that god-forsaken place he calls home
Cheers Glen - here's to many more 5 years'es!
James.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Jimbo For This Useful Post:
gssixgun (06-19-2012)
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06-19-2012, 01:46 AM #5
There are few we can be so grateful to for your incredible generosity in sharing what you know. Many Thanks, Glen.
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The Following User Says Thank You to pinklather For This Useful Post:
gssixgun (06-19-2012)
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06-19-2012, 02:20 AM #6
- Join Date
- Nov 2009
- Location
- Middle of nowhere, Minnesota
- Posts
- 4,623
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Thanked: 1371You're roughly 53 years old and you have 15,000 posts on an internet bulletin board dedicated to razors - and you call me a geek!
Congrats on 5 years and 15,000!
Thanks for all you do for the razor community!
Here's to the next 5/15!
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The Following User Says Thank You to HNSB For This Useful Post:
gssixgun (06-19-2012)
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06-19-2012, 11:00 AM #7
I would like to thank you for all you have taught me, Glen, via your videos and your dedication to the education of us newbies.
May all your shaves be smooth ones.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Havachat45 For This Useful Post:
gssixgun (06-19-2012)
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06-19-2012, 11:44 AM #8
Glen you have been so helpful to others, myself included! I learned so much from the Norton exercise you ran at the beginning of this year. Your encouragement to think out of the box is a gift to all of us. Thank you, thank you!!!
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The Following User Says Thank You to BanjoTom For This Useful Post:
gssixgun (06-19-2012)
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06-19-2012, 12:25 PM #9
I would like to think that I will still be using a straight after 31 years - however, given that I 'm 40 years older than when you started, that may be a challenge.
Congratulations on your incredible output. You also appear to have an incredible memory since your can pinpoint your start date to a month and year - or did you make a note of it?
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The Following User Says Thank You to UKRob For This Useful Post:
gssixgun (06-19-2012)
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06-19-2012, 03:44 PM #10
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Location
- North Idaho Redoubt
- Posts
- 27,026
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- 1
Thanked: 13245