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Thread: I just scraped my face off.

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    Member pitrik's Avatar
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    Default I just scraped my face off.

    Hey all, I bought a DE to finish up my shaves, rather than spend the same amount of money on cartridges.

    The razor is an Edwin Jagger DE89, with an astra blade (blue packaging, superior I believe).
    Prep: Shower, proraso pre-shave cream. Shave: proraso white soap.

    So, I was careful to just use the weight of the razor, and I ended up with a fair amount of blood, and it felt like it was pulling.

    Now it's likely that I'm the problem, as I'm new to it (same with the straight), but I'm going to try a derby blade next time to see if that makes a difference.

    Any thoughts? I also can't seem to figure out what lather is supposed to be like on my face. Maybe it's too thin?

    Thanks,

    Patrick

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    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
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    Lather should be light in weight and texture but firm. IOW not dripping off your razor or face as you're shaving. I don't know how else to describe it, my preference anyway.

    Are you stretching skin ? Skin should be stretched snug. Doesn't have to be pulled until it won't go anymore, just taut. Try the Derbys, they are more 'forgiving' IME.

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    pitrik (04-10-2013)

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    Member pitrik's Avatar
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    I'll let my face heal up a bit and then try again. I did some skin stretching, but maybe not enough. I really want this, and more importantly my straight, to be an awesome experience. So far that hasn't been the case, but I'm not giving up!
    JimmyHAD and pfries like this.

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    Senior Member Johnus's Avatar
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    Remember: Pain is just weakness leaving the body.
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    The Hurdy Gurdy Man thebigspendur's Avatar
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    The DE you're using is pretty tame really. You need to work on you stroke with angle and pressure the key words there.
    BobH likes this.
    No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero

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    Probably too steep of an angle. Start with the handle parallel to the floor and slowly increase the angle until you find the shallowest position that will still cut hair. That is the angle you want to maintain throughout the shave.

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    I was where you're at a couple of months ago, and decided that I'd do a lot less damage to my face if I scrubbed mercilessly on the hard spots with the straight rather than the DE. Looking back on things, I don't really understand why DE was considered an upgrade at the time--every time I've used one it's done a lot more damage than my straight.

    Lose the DE, and don't look back.

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    The Musician Bad06denby's Avatar
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    I too had a fair amount of blood when I first made the transition from cartridge razor to DE. I didn't know exactly how much to press (which you know should be almost not at all) and the proper angle yet. thing I noticed was that almost all the cuts I had gotten were over spots where I had ingrown razor bumps. (from cartridge razors of course) It had actually opened up all of them. Haven't had one since. My technique has gotten better over time but it will just come with practice. This is probably super contradictory to what most will tell you, but try a Feather blade. What I have found is that super aggressive blades will really put into perspective how little pressure is actually needed when you shave. Of course the flip side of that, which most people will attest to, if you give the slightest hint of too much pressure with a feather blade it will light your face on fire. Keep it up man, the muscle memory comes pretty quick actually.

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    dbateman (04-11-2013)

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    Hi Pat.

    I don't know the Edwin Jagger DE89 but I believe it has a bit of weight to it.

    I agree with 06 try a different blade I do like the feather blades, just use the weight of the razor and maybe just work straight down your face the first time.

    There should be no tugging or pulling when you shave the razor should just slice thru your whiskers.

    I'm not sure how everyone else does it but I shave right after I shower, before I get out I soap up my beard for a few min and give it a good wash and then let the warm water run over it for a bit. Then get out of the shower and dry off except for my face. I have my razor and brush soaking in the bowl in hot water wile I shower.

    I empty the bowl and apply some cream to the brush and the consistency I like when I am making it there should be little peaks forming around the edge of the bowl and if I pull the brush out the cream should form a peak and not run under it's own weight. Kind of like mixing a good batch of render.

    Keep at it mate it really is a good way to shave and fast once you get it down it takes me around ten min to do a three pass shave including prep and clean up. You'll learn fast.

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    Junior Member Merc's Avatar
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    When I started out using DE razors I had similar problems. Partly because all my DE are adjustable. The other reason was that when I used my Fatboy I applied too much pressure. My Father taught me that when you use a heavy DE, or heavier than what you are use to, hold the razor between your thumb and index finger below the head of the razor, and let it do the work. I done this until I learned how to cope with the weight of the razor.
    Shaving is an art, something that fathers pass to sons. Between electric razors and busy schedules the art of shaving is slowly dying. 1959 Fatboy, 1967 SA, DD Goldedge, Bresduck DD Special No1

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