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Keeping a stainless steel razor in a well ventilated bathroom will probably have no ill effects on the razor, but neither is it a recommended practice.
Until I retired five months ago, I was based less than 1 km from the sea in a location with high humidity where summer temperatures regularly reach 42ºC and above. After shaving and drying the outside and area between the scales of the (carbon steel or stainless) razor that I had used that day, I left the razor in the bathroom to dry for 24 hrs before replacing it. Before placing the razor into one of the razor storage cases in my study, I would treat it with Ballistol oil. As I have >70 razors it would take some time before I would use the saem razor again, but Ballistol worked very well during the storage period and corrosion was never an issue for me. If not Ballistol, closer to the U.S. you may be able to find Tuf Glide in a 4 oz spray bottle that serves the same purpose.
For me, palm stropping works for the initial stropping of replaceable blades of my Feather AC DX razors, but I doubt that in the long run it will perform adequately for straight razors.
Thus I consider a good strop essential.
To minimize expense a simple Herold loom strop might do, but my preference is a French-made Strop-it Supex 77 paddle strop (with exchangeable plattens) and a Norwegian-made 3” Scrupleworks oil-tanned Horween horsehide strop.
Kind of Eurocentric choice and not necessarily easy to find, but I found that these strops worked better for me than anything I picked up from North America or Japan (meaning Kanayama Cordovan strops).
All of this is very useful. Maybe a spray oil is the solution (I do it with the finger..). But still the whole rusting thing makes me nervous, once I forgot to wipe the drops for some minutes and now it has some dark spots :/. I was needing advice on strops, thank you.
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Regarding a bread trimmer, I recently bought a (cordless) Braun BT7220 that comes with two adapters, allowing you to mow down any bread growth down to between 0,5 and 20 mm (adjustable in 0,5 mm increments). A straight razor should make short shrift of a full grown beard, but if time is of the essence you could easily maintain a presentable 3-day stubble with such a bread trimmer.
I have been searching information on trimmers, as I understand the good ones which can give a close shave are the ones capable of zero gap alignment. This leaves most models outside except the BabyLiss pro, Wahl detailer, Andis t-outliner, and maybe some other more rare models. Even the good Gamma absolute hitter (also capable of zero-gap) seems to be worse than the others when it comes to close-shaving, based on reviews. I think the better ones could give closer than 0,5 and that would be very easy to finish with a single light pass of a straight razor if needed. Also I think those models should be the most durable as they are intended for professional use.