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Thread: Straight razor rookie in British Columbia.

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  1. #1
    Senior Member TrilliumLT's Avatar
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    Send that razor out to get it Honed up (sharpened) by one of the many members in our classifieds. Stropping i only use the canvas after ive honed up a razor. There are others that may dissagree with that, but thats what i do.

  2. #2
    'tis but a scratch! roughkype's Avatar
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    Hello Abraham, and welcome to SRP!

    All good advice here. The hanging hair test is only useful to you after you calibrate it to your own hair and develop a feel for what it says about the blade. When you get your honed razor back will be a good time to try. Here's how I made it meaningful for myself.

    It is no substitute for actually trying out a shave (the "shave test") because some hones and honers will give a glorious shaving edge that cannot pass the HHT. Strange but true.

    The shave test should answer two questions for you: How sharp should my razor be, and How much pressure should I use? I expect the razor to remove whiskers with no more force or pressure than it takes to scrape away the lather. That is all the force or pressure you should use anyway; more than that and you risk razor burn. If it takes more pressure, adjust your blade angle a little (30 deg or less for easy spots like your cheeks, maybe a little steeper where the whiskers are stouter, like your chin) and see if it cuts better. Try relathering if you're working through drying lather. If you find that the only solution is to press harder, then it's time to touch up the blade.

    You can also tell a dulling blade because it tugs at the hairs instead of severing them.

    And blah blah blah. I'll stop now. Best wishes and happy shaving.
    "These aren't the droids you're looking for." "These aren't the droids we're looking for." "He can go about his business." "You can go about your business."

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    AbrahamSandwich (08-20-2012)

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    Hi, Abraham, and a hearty welcome to SRP from another B.C. boy!
    +1 on all the great instruction posted above: get it honed by a professional. Right now you should be focusing entirely on your shaving preparation and your shaving technique. After that comes stropping. Stropping is the most important razor maintenance skill to master. There are many vids here that show excellent stropping techniques to help you out.
    See you in the trenches, buddy!

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    AbrahamSandwich (08-20-2012)

  6. #4
    Junior Member AbrahamSandwich's Avatar
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    Thanks friend-o, that sounds like good advice.

  7. #5
    Junior Member AbrahamSandwich's Avatar
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    Thanks for the advice. Boy, to a newbie like myself there's a lot of information. This is an amazing site. And yes, my razor tugs rather than severs, clearly my blade needs improvement. By the way, I like your profile pic. "Your arm's off! No it isn't!"
    Thanks again.

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