Originally Posted by
Bart
Whatever you finish the blade on gives a different feeling, whether that's a Shapton 16K, a Chosera 10K, a Norton 8K, a coticule, a leather strop with CrO, a felt strop with diamond spray. They all feel different. Even the hone that precedes the finisher may shine though the final results.
Let's dive in deep. Here's my theory:
Convexity or not, stropping draws out a bur. This is not a bad thing as such. It is also called a fin, and it is the purpose of plain leather stropping to restore the fin. Fins are drawn out of the steel by a process that Verhoeven calls "plastic deformation", and the steel lacks the original hardness. Therefor the need to realign the fin prior to each shave. The more keenness you lack after the hones, the more you will rely on pasted stropping to make up for that. The fin will be larger. Large fins are weaker. On a pasted hanging strop, convexing comes into play. This might keep the fin a bit shorter for the same keenness.
On a well honed blade, very little pasted stropping is needed, to add a little extra to the edge. Maybe the fin even benefits from it.
That's my premise right now.
Shoot at will.
Bart.