Results 11 to 20 of 23
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10-28-2013, 06:56 PM #11
I think you hit the nail on the head partner. The key of this hobby/adventure is open-minded experimentation. There's no way to know what it is you will love until you try things you might hate. Fortunately, we live in today's world where we have sites like this to open us up to so many different ideas. I'm proud of my ridiculous collection of creams and soaps and oils and balms and splashes and grinds and strops and hones. I want to find what's best. Simply sitting back and writing off someone else's good experiences because they don't jive with how you do things is a sure-fired path to nowhere.
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10-28-2013, 07:57 PM #12
Funny. Until I read that thread it never occured to me a cold water shave was anything except a punishment in "The Dirty Dozen". After a lifetime of post shave red- or irritated neck I recently tried the straight razor + cold water thingie and that's all she wrote. Neck doesn't even get prickly when I sweat. Well, if I ever regularly worked hard enough to have sweat-neck I don't think it'd burn. OK. I did sweat once, maybe, since cold water shaving and no irritation.
"We'll talk, if you like. I'll tell you right out, I am a man who likes talking to a man who likes to talk."
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10-28-2013, 09:26 PM #13
Think it was me that said that, the hot water just seems to irritate my face. When I started, I'd get out of the shower, do all the prep, or the, "shave parade" as I came to call it, and would end up with red, irritated skin.
Finally gave in and tried a simple cold shave, sometimes I'll use pre-shave, but most times I forget, and just splash the cold water on, two passes for a DFS, the alum block and I'm done, with little or no irritation.
With the hot, no matter what I did, I get a big red blotch of irritated skin on my lower right neck area. Would ease up more and more in that area, and still come away red. With the cold shave, all that's gone.
For me it works, lesson I learned was always be open minded enough to try different things. That's how you find out what works best for you.
Just like after a year I'm starting to find that the Thiers-Issard may be my Holy Grail of Razors...YMMV!
Cheers and enjoy!
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10-28-2013, 09:28 PM #14
One way to economize or focus experimentation is to notice/remember other shavers who's preferences or sensitivities are similar to your own. On soaps & creams, I pay alot of attention to Obie. On stropping - afdavis & recently Randydance. On stones (this can get excitable) - someone who's honing style, preference in feel is like your own. This is a place where pet rocks are sacred
You likely have other shavers nearby you. Germany has several razor sites with a strong German membership.
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10-29-2013, 12:02 AM #15
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Thanked: 1195For those that are irritating their skin with hot water shaves: just HOW hot is the water you're using? It's supposed to be hot, not scalding
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10-29-2013, 12:05 AM #16
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10-29-2013, 12:11 AM #17
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Thanked: 1195LOL, well you know, different strokes and all that
All joking aside, I'll occasionally get a bit of redness on my neck after shaving, which is probably a combination of hot water and many passes. But after my post shave routine it disappears in short order (well less than 5 minutes), so I really don't have an answer for that.
As for lathering techniques, yes I could understand how aggressive face lathering could cause redness in some skin types. It is technically exfoliation. Though this seems like a good excuse to buy a nice expensive silvertip brush there is a cheaper solution: bowl lathering. Get the lather to the perfect consistency and apply to your face with minimal aggravation.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Ryan82 For This Useful Post:
Hirlau (10-29-2013)
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10-29-2013, 12:18 AM #18
I know your comments are for the forum....but you just said something that caught my ear.
Sheesh, must have been almost a year ago, I bought a nice scuttle when I was brand new into str8's. After putting an entire puck of Col Conk in it and melting it completely, used some old Gillette canned lather I had for my second shave.
After that, yes, I'd watched lots of video's of people using the scuttle, looked pretty elegant, but I thought, my Proraso comes with a bowl, I wet my brush, swirl in the bowl, lather the face and bingo!!
Have some Proraso creams as well (including the new Blue which is quite nice), and would just use a small mug.
Maybe now, I can see a reason for the scuttle, fill it with the hot water, do the lather in that, and then apply to the face....huh...something new to try!
Would you simply "paint" the lather on your face, or really work it in with the brush like I've been doing?
I gather that I'd have to grate my puck of MWF if I wanted to use the scuttle then??
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10-29-2013, 12:52 AM #19
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- Oct 2008
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Thanked: 1195That's how I use my scuttles. With soaps I load the brush in a separate container (like Proraso, for example) and then make the lather in the bowl of the scuttle, adding water by sight until I get my desired consistency. With creams I'll just put a dab in the bottom of the scuttle. For application I paint, swirl, whatever - the lather will continue to develop even though the bulk of the work was done in the scuttle. Now here's the tricky part: it IS possible to over-process your lather by working it too much. What I mean is if you "overdo" it in either the bowl or on your face you'll prematurely break your lather down and it will disappear quickly. I know it sounds more complicated than it is - I have a habit of doing that sometimes
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10-29-2013, 12:55 AM #20