Results 1 to 10 of 14
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06-13-2015, 07:52 AM #1
What is happening in the SR world?
Yesterday I went to a store in Antwerp to buy a new SR (bought a Dove French Cut).
Of course, when talking to another SR enthusiast things take off very fast .
My first choice would have been a TI, but no ram's horn SR where present, the ordered TI weren't there yet.
We got talking about the delivery period of the razors and to be honest I was a bit surprised.
That TI aren't fast deliverers I can understand, in my mind it's a smaller company and more handmade razors than let's say Dovo. (It's possible this is just one of my delusions.)
Dovo is not taking any new customers at the moment because their production isn't able to keep up with orders. 3
There is a 3 month waiting period for Dovo, there was even an order of 21,000 razors.
They didn't take the order because it seems to like to keep things smaller.
Apparently the demand for DE is also higher but are easier to manufacture, sounds logical to me.
So what is happening in the SR world? Who would order about 21,000 razors?
Is this the beginning of the end for the cassette razors?
Just something I find strange.Sometimes I feel normal.
Then it's time to lay down and wait for it to pass.
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06-13-2015, 11:53 AM #2
i've heard the same thing about razor shortages. i does seem strange because i have met personally only about 3 SR shavers (not counting my SRP contacts). Must be spread out evenly through out the world. i know of no local shops that sell wet shaving supplies. the closest one i a hour away.
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06-13-2015, 02:36 PM #3
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Location
- Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada
- Posts
- 14,436
Thanked: 4827Everytime I am in the city, about twice a year, it's a long way, I run into wet shavers at the stores that sell supplies. What always surprises me is that most of the stores that I have been to that sell straight razors all say they are not shave ready and they have no idea where to get them sharpened. I have no idea how this business plan can unfold in such a way that they have increased sales. House of knives is a good example of that. I have encountered straight razor shavers most times I have been to a House of Knives. They have all claimed that they send them to someone in the US for sharpening. The business plan logic of this product line escapes me. It must somehow work for them. I think there are a lot of people that purchase as an impulse but never go forward because they are lost on the what is next process. I also think that only a small percentage of those buyers wind up here and in similar places.
It's not what you know, it's who you take fishing!
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06-13-2015, 03:21 PM #4
- Join Date
- Mar 2012
- Location
- Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
- Posts
- 17,303
Thanked: 3226Yes, there must be a lot more owners than actual serious users.
BobLife is a terminal illness in the end
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06-13-2015, 03:35 PM #5
I think there are a likely a fair number of guys who will buy a Straight for the "cool" factor and not ask too many questions about it at places like AoS or House of Knives. They will assume it is ready to go right out of the box (I mean, why wouldn't it be?) and, when they have a bad first experience, they will shelve it and go back to their safety razor or carts. We're kind of dumb that way . . .
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06-13-2015, 03:47 PM #6
I believe the SR producers are their own worse enemies. SR shaving is a pretty niche market. Have you ever seen an advert on tv for SRs? There are dozens upon dozens of adverts on tv for cartridge type razors, declaring that particular razor to be the best shave ever that you can't live without. That is, until they alter is slightly and then declare that the new one is better than the last, almost identical razor. Yes, they will shave you, but the best shave ever? I don't think so.
So, until the SR producers market their creations more effectively, we SR users are doomed to remain in the shadows.
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06-13-2015, 03:53 PM #7
I am fine with that . . . if everyone could do it, then it wouldn't be as much fun.
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06-13-2015, 04:15 PM #8
It's probably like 9 guys on a RAD bender...
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06-13-2015, 05:31 PM #9
It's a niche market and always has been and the "big" makers aren't too far removed from being a cottage industry so the slightest bump in demand and they fall behind. Add to that the fact these "big" makers are small sub divisions of much larger outfits who are not ramping up production and you have long waits.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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06-13-2015, 07:16 PM #10