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  1. #1
    Vintage Scent shop clerk Leon's Avatar
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    Default My Rooney has some kind of hair loss problem

    Hi gents.

    I 've the Rooney Silvertip small style 1 small for a year now. In the beginning I thought it was normal that one or two hairs would come off after the shave, at least I think I read it somewhere. After many shaves, the brush is still dropping hairs, I'm afraid it will go bald before the estimated life span I plan to give it - a few decades.
    After each shave, I shake it like a madman and after that I let it dry outside hoping the cool air will help the badger hair dry even better.

    Any theory on what's going wrong with it?

  2. #2
    Senior Member fpessanha's Avatar
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    Default

    Do you let the brush dry upside down? If not, maybe the brush is rottening or something... I've always heard that a brush should never air dry upside up... Other that that I have nothing else to add to this discussion.

  3. #3
    Vintage Scent shop clerk Leon's Avatar
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    Default

    Francisco,

    Good point, after being dry, I put it inside my shaving case in "standing" position.
    I got to get me a brush stand, or make my own.

  4. #4
    Senior Member fpessanha's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Leon View Post
    Francisco,

    Good point, after being dry, I put it inside my shaving case in "standing" position.
    I got to get me a brush stand, or make my own.
    Unless the brush is completely dry you should never leave it in an upright position. This is what an old barber told me... loss of hair is a quite common among cheap brushes but yours is a Rooney so that shouldn't happen. Get a brush stand for all your brushes to stand upside down. That way you insure that they dry out evenly and that no water gets stuck in the knot, thus avoiding the rottening of the hair. I had a brush that belonged to my father for years on end... and I managed to destroy it because it didn't dry out in an upright position. Lesson learnt... I now have a stand form my new (Semogue) brush!

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    Leon (09-01-2008)

  6. #5
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    Default Little Rooney

    Just recently I purchased a small Rooney brush from Jim over at Vintage Blades. I too had the same problem.
    At first I was loosing a few hairs each shave and attributed it to newness of the brush. After a while the brush was still loosing hairs: More than usual. I E-mailed Jim and returned the brush which he promptly
    exchanged. The replacement doesn't seem to be loosing hair as the first one did. I haven't had any problem with the replacement brush other than a normal loss when it was new. It's possible they had a bad batch. Everything seems to be O.K. now. Just fyi. I rinse mine with warm water, making sure all the soap is out and let dry in a brush stand with bristles down. Seems O.K. now.

  7. #6
    Face nicker RichZ's Avatar
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by fpessanha View Post
    Unless the brush is completely dry you should never leave it in an upright position. This is what an old barber told me... loss of hair is a quite common among cheap brushes but yours is a Rooney so that shouldn't happen. Get a brush stand for all your brushes to stand upside down. That way you insure that they dry out evenly and that no water gets stuck in the knot, thus avoiding the rottening of the hair. I had a brush that belonged to my father for years on end... and I managed to destroy it because it didn't dry out in an upright position. Lesson learnt... I now have a stand form my new (Semogue) brush!

    This is good advice. I just passed on my fathers silvertip badger brush from B Altman's to my son. The brush has to be over 40 years old but it was always hung dry.

  8. #7
    Vintage Scent shop clerk Leon's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by fpessanha View Post
    Get a brush stand for all your brushes to stand upside down.
    By the way, how do you gents hang your brushes? You must have lots of stands, no?
    I only have 2 brushes, a Rooney and a Semogue and what I do now is whatever brush I use is the one that goes to to stand and the other one that is there goes to the box (and is kept in an upright position - a big no-no, right?)
    I don't shave everyday, so the brush is left to dry upside down for more than 48 hours, but what about you gents that shave everyday and have several brushes? How do you manage to keep them? Do you have a stand for each brush? If not, what do you do to the brushes you don't have a stand?
    Am I being paranoid?

  9. #8
    Senior Member fpessanha's Avatar
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    Imagine Freddy Merdury singing "one brush!/ One stand!" as if he was singing "One vision"... I guess that's what I'd do... Of course, if you are infested with BAD the scenery changes a bit... and the song is now "1000 shaving brushes on their stands/ if one of the brushes should happen to fall.../ 999 shaving brushes on their stands..." and so forth. Get the picture? But hey... let's wait for one of them BAD coleages of ours to chime in and sing their own song!

  10. #9
    Vintage Scent shop clerk Leon's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by fpessanha View Post
    Imagine Freddy Merdury singing "one brush!/ One stand!" as if he was singing "One vision"... I guess that's what I'd do... Of course, if you are infested with BAD the scenery changes a bit... and the song is now "1000 shaving brushes on their stands/ if one of the brushes should happen to fall.../ 999 shaving brushes on their stands..." and so forth. Get the picture? But hey... let's wait for one of them BAD coleages of ours to chime in and sing their own song!
    Francisco, you have a wild imagination!

  11. #10
    kca
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    Default

    I have about 5 or 6 brushes right now and one stand. I've heard mixed things about the necessity of a stand but I'd rather be safe than sorry so as Leon described above I dry the last brush used in the stand. I haven't been shaving daily recently but up until about a month ago I was and I felt ok taking the brush off the stand after 24 hours or even less.

    I always thoroughly (not roughly) rinse, shake, squeeze and gently towel dry the brush immediately after use and then place in the stand. So far I haven't had any issues but then again my oldest brush is probably no more than a year old so who knows what will happen long term.

    Cheers,

    Casey

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