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Thread: Vintage look
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08-02-2010, 06:08 PM #1
- Join Date
- May 2010
- Location
- Middletown, Ohio
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Thanked: 14Vintage look
I may be a little off here but I kinda like the way vintage razors look with very little sanding. Something about seeing some of the "patina" that only vintage razors have appeals to me. Anyone else feel the same?
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08-02-2010, 11:58 PM #2
Lots of us like patina if it's even and not blotchy or rusty.Especially when the contrast of the honed bevel is real shiny.In fact,we have a couple of clubs dedicated to these types of razors.
http://straightrazorpalace.com/razor...ina-arena.html
http://straightrazorpalace.com/razor...rustiques.html
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08-03-2010, 03:48 AM #3
I do. I have polished out a bunch of blades but there are still a bunch I like the way they are. The patina does add some allure to them and brings thoughts of who the previous owners may have been.
“If you always do what you always did, you will always get what you always got.” (A. Einstein)
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08-03-2010, 04:08 AM #4
It would be a disservice, in my opinion, to take a blackened but unrusted old Wostenholm or W&B Sheffield wedge in good horn scales, and try to mirror polish the blade. I like them as they are. The few experiments I have done with trying to renovate them detracted from their historic appearance, so I don't do anything with them now but clean up surface dirt and rough corrosion.
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08-03-2010, 04:52 AM #5
I feel the same... I've bought more than one razor with the intention of polishing it up and dressing her up in fancy new scales... only to decide that I prefer the original look, patina and all.
At this point, the only razors I will rescale/restore are ones that have no or completely trashed scales and rust. I've come to appreciate the beauty that comes with age...
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08-03-2010, 04:59 AM #6
For me, it sort of depends. I have seen nice patina - uniform, appealing pattern - but I have also seen some that are just ugly (IMO, of course). I could look at a given razor and say "I'd like to see that one cleaned up" or "You'd be crazy to change that," but I couldn't make any blanket statements.
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08-03-2010, 05:04 AM #7
That makes sense.. The ones with patina that I have are very nicely even and still clean looking.
I guess i just haven't come across any really ugly ones yet. Ugliness would still be ugliness... get out the sand paper!
On a moment's reflection, i'd have to agree with Dylan; it would have to be the right patina.
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08-03-2010, 05:08 AM #8
ha ha ha, now I'm laughing because this thread has reminded my of the one time I tried to develop an artificial patina by a soak in vinegar.... Epic fail! I forgot that the razor was in there, soaking, and by the time I came back to it, all the little pits I couldn't sand out had gotten bigger, and the whole thing looked really crappy.
Chalked that one up to experience....
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08-03-2010, 03:48 PM #9
I saw a post recently where someone had "mirror polished" a straight razor. In the before pictures, deep rust pitting was visible. It was not surface rust. In the after pictures, true the blade shone nicely. But, the pits of rust could still be seen. It was much less visible, and in fact most newbies would not even notice them they were so small.
This illustrates my biggest reason for preferring the natural look. Nothing has been hidden, either purposefully (not too often here, I don't believe) or inadvertently during refurbishing.
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08-04-2010, 04:48 AM #10
i'm the opposite when it comes to razors.. i love the way my artist club looks are futuristically surgical and precise.. the brushed metal and the molded handle really do it for me.. the same with my merkur de.. i just love the looks..
but i love a nice patina on my clothes and other items... i have a pair of ray ban wayfarers that i've had for about 6 years that has really developed some nice wear.. they look as if they have character and have seen some times.. not like everyone else in los angeles with their shiny new pair.. they just look like they saw katy perry wearing a set and ran out and got some.. i also love the worn look and frayed edges on my denim jacket and my doc martins.. i feel classy wearing older clothes.