Originally Posted by
cpcohen1945
FWIW (after eveyone else has had their say) --
The kit sounds fine.
a) You cannot afford a "lack of concentration" when using a straight razor. If you're rushed, if you're preoccupied, if you're really tired -- use something else for the shave. It's _not_ a cartridge razor, or a DE; there are no training wheels.
b) There's no real "30 degree rule". What I have found that works:
. . . . Hold the blade flat against your skin, and start a slow stroke;
. . . . Raise the spine until the edge just starts to cut your beard. That's the right angle to use.
. . . The angle will be flatter going ATG and XTG, than going WTG.
c) "the razor bumps along my skin and then digs in." This _could_ be:
. . . . a slightly-dull blade, or
. . . . . not enough skin-stretching, or
. . . . a beard that needs more pre-shave prep -- hot shower, hot towel, or something else to soften it a bit more.
What can happen with a slightly-dull blade is that you apply more pressure, and make the angle larger, to force it to cut beard. But with that much pressure, and that increased angle, it's happy to cut skin.
When you don't stretch your skin, the pressure of the razor's edge lifts a ridge of skin in front of the edge. That happens even more, if you're pressing on the blade. The angle between the edge, and that ridge, is larger than you think it is. And the razor digs in.
I suggest that you forget about ATG and XTG passes, until you get a solid, "no-cuts" WTG system worked out. Good pre-shave prep, a sharp edge, and very very very light pressure on the blade should help.
Two questions:
. . . How many laps are you stropping between shaves?
. . . What's your pre-shave prep?
Charles
PS -- the thing that separates "beginner shaver" from "expert shaver" is that the expert has made _all_ the beginner mistakes, and doesn't make them any more. At least, not often.<g>