It's ok Carl, stop being agressively defensive. The razor was and is fine. :)
Printable View
Oh I thought I was being passive-aggressive. Need to work on that...
Just jokes. The heat getting to you Ed?
for me it very soon. I really like to do things for my self. when I started a friend honed all my razors. then I ordered the set of naniwa ss stones up to 12K. now I ordered them one at a time but got them in a less than 2 months. it's really up to the person. It's not cheap to start with but it's all up to you. Watch Lynn Abrams u tube video on honing and decide for your self. either way you'll enjoy I believe. good luck
Before buying any razors or hones or any straight shaving related items I spent about six months reading JUST about honing. Then I bought my first set at once and started to hone right away.
This is large thread, moving to Honing....
I started right away with Norton 1K, 4K, 8K and a Naniwa 12K. It took me about a month of honing every day to get a decent edge off that setup.
Now I use Shapton 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 and 30K with excellent results on almost every blade I've encountered. The 30K takes some practice to milk the smoothest edge out without ruining things.
My collection has grown from a couple Dovos and TI's to about 40 razors of all makes from the first half of the last century.
Start now and you'll really enjoy the hobby if you like technical stuff. If you're all thumbs you may want to leave honing to the pros! There's nothing more satisfying than restoring an old gem and shaving with it the next day.
-john
- two cheap 5/8 Dovos, both sold.
- King 1K, replaced with another one (but using Chosera 1K exclusively)
- belgian blue and yellow coticule with cotigura. Still using them, when deciding to take that "natural road"
- Illionois 827 strop, still enjoying it!
- Tony Miller paddle strop for diamond pastes. Not using paddle strop. Gave pastes away