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    Picked it up in an antique store in New Orleans yesterday for $14. I feel like I got a bargain.

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    Historically Inquisitive Martin103's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by geauxtig3rs View Post
    Picked it up in an antique store in New Orleans yesterday for $14. I feel like I got a bargain.
    You did for sure can you post a pic of the label side?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Martin103 View Post
    You did for sure can you post a pic of the label side?
    I can tonight. I can post an exterior of the box now.

    http://i.imgur.com/g2oqPh.jpg

    EDIT: It's identical to this one:

    http://www.ebay.com/itm/THE-GENUINE-...#ht_500wt_1289
    Last edited by geauxtig3rs; 03-26-2012 at 04:27 PM.

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    50 year str. shaver mrsell63's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by geauxtig3rs
    Perhaps I'm not sure what would be considered easy or difficult slurry. I'm still quite new to this. Here is a picture.

    http://i.imgur.com/BLWwdh.jpg
    ______________________________________


    My Thuringian is a very deep dark Charcoal in color with dimensions of 6 1/2 x 1 1/2 inches.

    I am totally pleased with its performance. Best shaves of my life.
    JERRY
    OOOPS! Pass the styptic please.

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    Master of insanity Scipio's Avatar
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    'Escher' branded varieties came with a 'rubber' or slurry stone as we call it with instructions advocating its use. Contrast this with other Escher hones with came fitted in a wooden box like the one in the OP, and other non-Escher Thuringians which were sold without a slurry stone. Which is correct? Given that one variety recommended it yet another is silent on the matter, there is no way of ascertaining which mode of use was preferred when the stones were quarried. To complicate things further, some experienced members here prefer slurry, yet others prefer without while some are impartial.

    I can tell you that you can still get a great edge without using anything other than the stone and water, provided the razor is at least 8k finished before hand.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Scipio View Post
    I can tell you that you can still get a great edge without using anything other than the stone and water, provided the razor is at least 8k finished before hand.
    This is what I have seen to be the case.

    Last night with just about a dozen x-strokes, I got it to nearly silently pass HHT on a full hollow grind. I'm very interested to see if I can manage any better. This is my favorite acquisition thus far in my entire collection.

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    I have 3 thuringians and they all produce great edges. I use a Cnat slurry stone to raise a slurry on mine, a DMT card would do the same, as long as what you are using is harder than the thuringian you should be fine. I use mine with a creamy slurry after my coticule and it gives a wonderful edge. That is a very nice stone you have there, I like the cased ones. Some are faster than others and can be used without slurry. I have one that is pretty fast and cuts well without slurry but I have another that is a blue green and you can't feel it cutting at all.

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    I Bleed Slurry Disburden's Avatar
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    TO properly use a Thuringian stone or an Escher stone you need to take the edge to maxium sharpness, then use this stone with a slurry and test how many strokes you need. Make thirty strokes, test shave, increase if needed, etc.

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    The original Skolor and Gentileman. gugi's Avatar
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    For me the label doesn't make any difference to how a hone works, because I never run the edge over the label. I like these hones and I've played with may be 30 or so of all kinds of sizes and brands or no brands. From my observation the vintage ones have been much much better than the current production. Among the vintage ones there are small differences, but they don't seem to correlate much with the color, so I don't care if it's dark blue, blue green, yellow green, etc. After I test it I can decide how much I like it compared to others and that's all that matters.

    I think out of those 30-ish I've ended up with just 3 - 1"x5", 1.5"x7", and 2"x10" the size is the main distinguishing characteristic, only the big one has an Escher label on it and comes in a wooden box.

    I usually use them with just water, but I've done slurry on few occasions where the edge needed more work.

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    For me , a thuringian I sell it to a SRP member , have no sticker, but was far better than couple of Eschers. Thuringians and Eschers are just finisher stones, some faster, but you just need couple of strokes, not more than 50 on 5x1 to havean excellent edge. If you don't have an excellent edge , means you come to early on thuringian/ escher. I have one, glued on a coticule, is a small 3 1/2 x 2 , made by a barber. He ask the customer before the shave, you want coticule edge or escher edge.He just do 10 strokes on , and was ready to go.

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