Results 1 to 10 of 13
Thread: The "craft" of shaving
Hybrid View
-
12-22-2006, 12:00 AM #1
- Join Date
- May 2006
- Posts
- 2,516
Thanked: 369When I first decided I wanted to learn to shave the old fashioned way, with a straight razor, I decided that even before buying the razor, I would find a barber to shave me. That way I'd know what I was getting into, or so I thought.
I found an old man of a barber in Santa Monica, California who still did straight razor shaves. From the moment I walked into his shop for that one and only shave, I watched everything he did. I watched as he honed the razor and then stropped it. I paid attention to every move he made over my face.
At the end, as I paid him, I nerved up and asked him if he would take the time to teach me to use the straight razor. He waved me off saying "no, it would take too much time."
Wow, I was a little hurt and disapointed. Really, how much time would it take to show a kid a few things?? Grouchy old fart!
Now, 27 years later, I completely understand the old master.
I had my wife read your posting. When she finished she said, "boy, you guys sure are passionate about this." I said, "yes we are, in fact we're passionate about a lot of things. We're just passionate people."
Hmmmm. Passion and craft, or skills of the hand, seem to be a theme in my life.
Go to the store and buy ice cream? I'd rather make my own in my hand cranked White Mountain ice cream maker, a hand crafted piece of art in itself, made the same as it was 150 years ago. No store bought ice cream tastes as good to me. How to tell when it's time to stop cranking? By feel.
Baking. I've baked at home, and in commercial bakeries. Sure, I buy ready made bread, but nothing beats hand made. How does a baker know when to stop kneading bread dough? By feel. It comes with experience. The satiny, springy feel of bread dough ready to be formed into loaves.
I've always admired those who made wood furniture by hand with old hand tools. I always wanted to learn, but never did.
What allows someone to continue long enough to develop the "feel," the skill? I'm guessing it's passion. Kind of silly to associate shaving with passion, but then, when put into the context of a craft, I think it fits.
So, I've gone on long enough too, but thank you for the great post, Dale.
Scott
-
12-22-2006, 03:34 AM #2
A wonderful opening post and it demonstrates your enthusiasm and excitement concerning straight shaving.
personally and I don't mean to burst your bubble or anything like that but sometimes when we get involved in some endeavor which is essentially a common or trivial thing we kind of elevate it to cetain heights. Straight shaving afterall is a common mundane task performed by millions of men all over the world at a time when it was the only way to do it. I think most dreaded it and considered it drugery and as evidenced by its general demise most would say good riddens.
So along come all of us and we think its the greatest thing since sliced bread and it becomes a hobby to us and we talk about our razors and restorations and brushes and hones and mugs and all the rest and all the money we've invested in paraphanelia and we think we're just too cool. Those guys in the 1800s are probably laughing in their graves at us.
To me its just a lost skill like many others out there waiting to be rediscovered. Now pardon me while I go back to refinishing my vintage teak shaving mug!No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
-
12-22-2006, 03:40 AM #3
- Join Date
- Apr 2006
- Posts
- 3,396
Thanked: 346I just wanted a good shave...
-
12-22-2006, 04:48 AM #4
I too just wanted a good shave at first, just the way a barber shaved me once.
Then I did realize how much skill and craftmanship is involved and it grew into a love afair. I live a rather exciting life and have many hobbies, but at the moment I cannot think of anything that makes me more proud than my growing (yet still beginner) skill regarding SR shaving.
-
12-22-2006, 03:41 PM #5
You're right, I am excited about my newly discovered hobby (less so when I have shaves with burns and wounds like I did yesterday!). But I have the same excitement for the craft of furniture making with traditional hand tools that I've enjoyed for years. So we'll see how long before my bubble bursts.
One of your points and the points made by others are well taken...it's just a shave. Sorta. Like the hand-made Windsor chairs I make are just chairs. True, if you just want to sit, Oak Express will do. It depends on what you want from a chair. Likewise, it depends on what you want from a shave. Unlike some, I was blissfully satisfied with my goo-n-plastic shaves. It didn't hurt, I had no skin problems, and my wife kissed me. If I just want to have a clean face, I can stick with that. But for me, it is more than just a shave. To each his own. The great thing is that this hobby offers something for everyone from crazies like me to those who just want a better shave.
Also, let me clarify something my glowing opening post may have implied, I'm not claiming that the value of a good SR shave is equivalent to a 250 year old Queen Anne Highboy or that a master of shaving is equivilent to a master cabinetmaker. I'm just claiming that both depend on a sense of hand that is very rare and hard for most of us moderns to grasp. It's a sense of hand that I do enjoy and I think adds to the experiences of SR's, chairmaking, or anything else that depends on it. It's a sense that comes with the right mix of procedure, understanding, desire, time and practice. In our tendency to assume all-things-new are better, and that all-things-faster are better, we've lost some of this sense that was so much a part of the mind of the past.
Thanks for your thoughts.
- Dale
-
12-22-2006, 04:14 PM #6
-
12-22-2006, 04:22 PM #7
For me a straight razor just seemed really
damn cooler, way cooler than a Gillette
multi blade.
And you know something....... I was right.
Terry
-
12-22-2006, 05:38 PM #8