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Thread: New to honing: The One Stone Honing Method

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    I used Nakayamas for my house mainaman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by FauxPax View Post
    I went ahead and purchased the King 1k and a C12k (smaller size)
    If you have those two you will need to add some fillers in between, the jump from 1k to whatever the fineness equivalent of the Chinese stone is way too big.
    The C12k is a very slow stone.
    Stefan

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    Senior Member rodb's Avatar
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    I would also add this Slate Honing Stones for sale by Inigo Jones With slurry this will probably be 2-4k, with water only 5-7k, if you use slurry to start on the C12 you "might" cover all the bases for a reasonable amount
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    Senior Member Proinsias's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mainaman View Post
    If you have those two you will need to add some fillers in between, the jump from 1k to whatever the fineness equivalent of the Chinese stone is way too big.
    The C12k is a very slow stone.
    It's a leap but it can be done:

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    Quote Originally Posted by Proinsias View Post
    It's a leap but it can be done:
    The OP is a honing newbie, take that into consideration.
    Stefan

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    Would the Welsh Dragon's Tongue w/ slurry stone be enough to bridge the gap?

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    Senior Member rodb's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by FauxPax View Post
    Would the Welsh Dragon's Tongue w/ slurry stone be enough to bridge the gap?
    I've got all three, I'll give it a try and report back. I'm thinking it will work (with some trial and error )
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    Senior Member cflaageriv's Avatar
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    I think it can be done - to some degree, anyway. I often hone my razors up to par with (an estimated 1k or a little bit higher) an old unnamed and unmarked stone I've had for years. That's the rare pass on the "occasional "use stone. That's because I for the most part, my bevels have [all] been set (for now anyway). Then I'll run the razor over both sides of my barber's hone for at least a few passes. Is that all you need, the barber's hone? Maybe. It works for me. But I also put any blade across a chrox strop for about ten passes. And it's not that I'm boasting, I just learned to "hone" from a very early time. Like I've mentioned before, I'm a hunter and I've always butchered my own game. My grandfather would check my honing and make sure it was up to par. In addition, I was a commercial fisherman and had to always have a sharp fillet knife. One thing that has provided me is a lack of [fear] of honing. I would advise you to get a barber's hone and practice on a reasonable priced razor from this site - say, one in the $35 - $45 range - one that comes "shave-ready" and is cheap enough to allow experimentation without fear. So long as you can use tape on it by all means please do that. Just go to town on it. Try different techniques, etc. And good luck.

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    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by FauxPax View Post
    Would the Welsh Dragon's Tongue w/ slurry stone be enough to bridge the gap?
    Quote Originally Posted by rodb View Post
    I've got all three, I'll give it a try and report back. I'm thinking it will work (with some trial and error )
    The DT I have will do it no problem...

    Warning here though, when you are talking natural stones they all vary, My PHIG it that vid is a hand selected one that I chose after I tested 4 different ones to get the best feeling one...

    I have since tested about 20 and I have only found 2 others that compare and about 15 others that would work, the rest I wouldn't use on razors

    With DT's I have actually only honed on 3 and all three were pretty comparable, and I would agree that they cut in the 3-6 with slurry and the 5-7 without
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    Senior Member cflaageriv's Avatar
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    Actually, reconsidering the topic, I don't think it's advisable. I think if I had to have one stone it would be a Norton 4/8. That and a pasted strop have worked for me quite well in the past. I mean really, for the (I don't know what they cost these days but I'm guessing about $80 bucks or so) money, you're set for life. In addition, I like mentioning to my other half after a fine shaving experience, that I just saved about $30 bucks. That's because at my barber shop they charge $25 for a straight shave, and with a tip it's $30+. So, maybe you should look at it that way. What I mean to say is this: say you spend $4 for one of those modern blades, which, you should be changing once a week if you wont a decent shave (and that's stretching it). That comes to $16 a month, conservatively. So you figure that in about four or five months your Norton is bought and paid for, and the rest, as they say, is gravy.

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