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Thread: Fourth Gold Dollar custom

  1. #1
    Scheerlijk Laurens's Avatar
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    Default Fourth Gold Dollar custom

    From my little bunch of Gold Dollars, this is the fourth attempt! This time in plain black acrylic, white acrylic wedge. I gave it a modest Spanish point and tried my hand at filework, but found it too difficult for me, yet. Finish is brushed. Honing is just finished, she's up in two days time.

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    I would like a drill press to prevent these angled pins, they're a bit sloppy:
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    Thanks for watching and I'm looking forward to your comments and criticisms!
    Adam G., Geezer, jc50 and 2 others like this.
    I want a lather whip

  2. #2
    Member joostmoree's Avatar
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    Default

    A golden bit does not make the horse any better!
    In Dutch: Ook al draagt een aap een gouden ring, het is en blijft een lelijk ding ( Although a monkey wears a golden ring, it remains an ugly thing.).
    Sorry for this strong opinion Laurens but you're pulling at a dead horse. I'd rather propose to spend your precious time and first class accomplishments on a neglected aged quality product.
    Last edited by joostmoree; 09-09-2013 at 09:05 PM.

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    Laurens (09-10-2013)

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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Laurens, I'm going to go the other way and say nice job. Hope it serves you well!
    Geezer likes this.
    CHRIS

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    Laurens (09-10-2013)

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    Beautiful job. I restored a GD. They are worth the time and effort IMHO. They are excellent shavers. And the practice can be used later for restoring a more expensive and higher quality vintage razor. Besides that, it's fun to do.
    Geezer and Chugach68 like this.

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    Laurens (09-10-2013)

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    Senior Member souschefdude's Avatar
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    I think there is validity in using a GD to learn scale making. I destroyed a beautiful old razor early on in my learning. Wish I hsd learned the mistake on one of these.
    I still feel sick about that razor.
    borabus likes this.

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    Laurens (09-10-2013)

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    50 year str. shaver mrsell63's Avatar
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    I recently posted some good advice in this thread http://straightrazorpalace.com/razor...-too-many.html and I think I would recommend the same advice regarding the Gold Dollar blade above. My advice is to stick with top quality purchases and stay away from bargains. I speak from bitter experience.
    JERRY
    OOOPS! Pass the styptic please.

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    Laurens (09-10-2013)

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    Razor Vulture sharptonn's Avatar
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    I think you did well! This is your best GD yet! I understand you are learning on them.
    If one thinks about it, better than risking an expensive blade. This one is neat!
    spazola, Geezer and Berthold like this.
    "Don't be stubborn. You are missing out."
    I rest my case.

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    Laurens (09-10-2013)

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    Senior Member blabbermouth 10Pups's Avatar
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    Do you drill the holes before or after you shape the scales ? Reason I ask is it's a lot easier to drill them straight when you can lay the scales flat. Then maybe use something square next to the hole as you drill to kind of help you guide it in straight. A block or even dice would work. Use the corner close to the hole so you can see both directions. Then do the shaping. Drill press is nice but same problem unless you drill em when they are flat. Your doing great, getting better for sure.
    Good judgment comes from experience, and experience....well that comes from poor judgment.

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    Laurens (09-10-2013)

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    Member joostmoree's Avatar
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    Default add value to value

    I agree with Mrsell. Some years ago I spilled blood, sweat and tears on pimping some Giesen & Forsthoff ~ new production. The endproducts looked good but they were as razors horrible and useless. My work on them (and my frustration) ended with unpinning the scales, taping the steelwork for safety sake and disposing of the junk.
    Laurens did excellent work. But I advise him tot put his energy and craftsmanship into restorable vintage blades. They are available for a few pounds on Ebay. I could introduce to him a fine trustworthy vendor. Then he will really add value to value.
    Attached Images Attached Images  
    Last edited by joostmoree; 09-10-2013 at 09:15 PM.

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    Scheerlijk Laurens's Avatar
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    Thank you for your diverse and helpful comments! This makes for an interesting discussion.

    Quote Originally Posted by joostmoree View Post
    A golden bit does not make the horse any better!
    In Dutch: Ook al draagt een aap een gouden ring, het is en blijft een lelijk ding ( Although a monkey wears a golden ring, it remains an ugly thing.).
    Sorry for this strong opinion Laurens but you're pulling at a dead horse. I'd rather propose to spend your precious time and first class accomplishments on a neglected aged quality product.
    Quote Originally Posted by souschefdude View Post
    I think there is validity in using a GD to learn scale making. I destroyed a beautiful old razor early on in my learning. Wish I hsd learned the mistake on one of these.
    I still feel sick about that razor.
    Quote Originally Posted by mrsell63 View Post
    I recently posted some good advice in this thread http://straightrazorpalace.com/razor...-too-many.html and I think I would recommend the same advice regarding the Gold Dollar blade above. My advice is to stick with top quality purchases and stay away from bargains. I speak from bitter experience.
    I'm a little on both sides. Working with these cheap GDs is a way for me to relax and focus my thoughts completely at the job at hand. I find that every time I improve a little bit and with four more to come, I wonder how well I will do on the next projects.

    On the other hand, GDs will never have the same character a vintage blade or a custom razor has. I might decide to keep vintage blades as close to original as possible, and use Gold Dollars for custom shapes and scales.

    Quote Originally Posted by 10Pups View Post
    Do you drill the holes before or after you shape the scales ? Reason I ask is it's a lot easier to drill them straight when you can lay the scales flat. Then maybe use something square next to the hole as you drill to kind of help you guide it in straight. A block or even dice would work. Use the corner close to the hole so you can see both directions. Then do the shaping. Drill press is nice but same problem unless you drill em when they are flat. Your doing great, getting better for sure.
    I drill them before shaping the scales, but I only have a big fat hammer drill for all my drilling :P Using a guide as you suggest may solve that, thanks for the hint!

    Quote Originally Posted by joostmoree View Post
    I agree with Mrsell. Some years ago I spilled blood, sweat and tears on pimping some Giesen & Forsthoff ~ new production. The endproducts looked good but they were as razors horrible and useless. My work on them (and my frustration) ended with unpinning the scales, taping the steelwork for safety sake and disposing of the junk.
    Laurens did excellent work. But I advise him tot put his energy and craftsmanship into restorable vintige blades. They are available for a few pounds on Ebay. I could introduce to him a fine trustworthy vendor. Then he will really add value tot value.
    I have no experience myself with Giesen & Forsthoff, but I believe some of the new production razors do not keep an edge as well as a Gold Dollar. In fact, they are on the list of brands to avoid (Brands of Straight Razors to avoid - Straight Razor Place Wiki). The shaves I have gotten from my Gold Dollars are on par with those from my other razors, so I'm happy with the final result!

    Thank you for you kind words, and I would like to hear more about the vendor you mention or buying from eBay in general. While I have been browsing on eBay a bit, I found too much junk to sort out the quality blades (zag door de bomen het bos niet meer).
    Perhaps we can even meet up, I live at the Leyweg in The Hague!
    I want a lather whip

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