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    Senior Member blabbermouth edhewitt's Avatar
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    Sorry to disagree with you but generally we don't advise buying $400 razors to learn to hone on, generally the advice is to get a decent vintage razor in the $40-60 range and start by refreshing on a high grit stone.
    I am not saying there is anything wrong with the path you have chosen it is just the harder path.
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    Bread and water can so easily become tea and toast

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    Senior Member guitstik's Avatar
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    Whipped Dog Straight Razor Shaving Equipment This is an excellent place for a beginner to pick up a good inexpensive razor to learn on and one of the places that we would send a noob for just such. We try not to be snobs around here but we just can't help it when it comes to GD RSO's because we have seen a lot of new shavers quit because of the poor quality and shavability.
    SRP. Where the Wits aren't always as sharp as the Razors
    http://straightrazorplace.com/shaving-straight-razor/111719-i-hate-you-all.html

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    Senior Member BeJay's Avatar
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    Welcome to SRP. I'm also a driver, but my OTR days are behind me(miss it sometimes).

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    Senior Member blabbermouth RezDog's Avatar
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    Welcome to the forum. I have to say I never have had a GD razor. They have a reputation for being unpredictable quality. I also learned to hone on pristine razors. As far as getting blades pro honed, I do that to. Not because it is needed in order for me to get a good shaving edge. I do it to feel the edges that others achieve. In the early times of my honing it also gave me a benchmark to shoot for. Happy shaving.
    It's not what you know, it's who you take fishing!

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    Senior Member Longhaultanker's Avatar
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    It seems to me, and this is just one man's opinion, some here need to take a remedial course on reading and comprehension. Forest Gump might say snobbery is as snobbery does. I may be rather new to straight razor shaving, but I'm certainly no greenhorn. I thought the ultimate test of sharpness was the shave itself. Isn't that correct? Suffice it to say, I get BBS shaves from all my razors now, including the Gold Dolliar. Some good, some better, some excellent. I'm sure experience will improve my skills and techniques. I can see why some youngsters might run away given certain gatekeepers. One sees Gold Dollar and goes into attack mode. I'm sure looking forward to my new Wacker 7/8 Old Sheffield w/ barber's notch coming this week.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth RezDog's Avatar
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    Your Wacker will be a treat for sure. Have you considered any of the vintage blades? You have some very nice razors, and all are current productions, if you look to the vintage blades there are some different styles and different shaving experiences. I have an old Frederick Reynolds that I am quite fond of that is very different from your current rotation. Just a thought.
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    www.edge-dynamics.com JOB15's Avatar
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    Hi, welcome.
    I learnt to hone with expensive new razors. I say learnt but maybe 3 years in and I'm still learning, you never stop learning and improving.
    It does take time but its time well spent
    How much are Gold Dollar Razors anyway, surely not a dollar ?
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    Senior Member Longhaultanker's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by RezDog View Post
    Your Wacker will be a treat for sure. Have you considered any of the vintage blades? You have some very nice razors, and all are current productions, if you look to the vintage blades there are some different styles and different shaving experiences. I have an old Frederick Reynolds that I am quite fond of that is very different from your current rotation. Just a thought.
    The nice thing about a hobby is that there are usually many different aspects to it and the hobbyist can find which he wants to focus on. Personally, I have no interest in vintage razors. I like the mirror polish of the TIs, the gold washes of the Dovos, the etchings and carved spines, and I don't mind paying for these. To me there is nothing better that holding one of these beautiful works of art and shaving with an edge I honed. I have neither time or interest to hunt and find vintage razors, restore them (requiring equipment I don't have). To buy a vintage only takes my money from the next new purchase. A vintage would truly have to sparkle and posses unique features for me to be interested. Then there's always that question, is there something else I could get?
    RezDog and engine46 like this.

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