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Thread: Poor shave

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  1. #1
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    Thanks for the replies fella's. It's not just the chin, from the moment the blade touches my face if feels vastly different from the shavette. I have tried all manner of different angles and pressures, nothing seems to work, but as soon as I use the shavette there is no problems at all. The shavette cuts with no tugging or "digging in". The blade on my straight just doesn't feel right. It is very difficult to explain.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth tcrideshd's Avatar
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    Lots of guys up in Canada , do a member search for a mentor. , it's either the razor or you , but as Ron said chin only is likely technique, you,ve only been at this for a few months , and maybe the shavette is the one you reach for the most, hence more experience , and not much on the straight. Takes a hundred or so shaves with a straight to really get to know it , maybe less with some but it's not an instant acquired talent. Tc
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    Senior Member feltspanky's Avatar
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    Does your razor (pop) cut arm or leg hair at mid-length easily.

  4. #4
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    If you're skillful enough to shave with a shavette and not slice yourself up then my guess is its the razor, not you. As has been suggested, find a mentor with hones. Good luck.
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  5. #5
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    Your straight razor probably needs a proper sharpening, that's why your Shavette works, it's always sharp.
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    Stay calm. Carry on. MisterMoo's Avatar
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    First, a shavette doesn't need stropping. I'd say there are many more, not less, of us who have taken perfect shave-ready straights and quickly stropped them into barely-razors. Less than good stropping will mess up an edge in a heartbeat.

    If you started with a shave-ready razor and it wouldn't shave ANYWHERE comfortably that suggests to me either. 1) it wasn't really shave-ready to begin with; or 2) you stropped it before use and killed the edge.

    I've only shaved with two Dovos so I'm no expert. Here's all I know about Dovos: one was a few years old and shaved like silk; the other was a neighbor's and new out of the box, called "shave-ready" by a major razor retailer and it wouldn't shave a cooked banana. After setting a new bevel, honing and stropping it too was smooth as silk.

    My chin and under the lower lip are like steel wires but, like Utopian said, developing a good technique helps a lot and I'll add to that nothing else works like an arm-hair popping, hanging hair slicing, shave tested blade from a qualified honer. This has been a problem for you since Fevbruaary; you might ought to find a SRP mentor up your way. Good luck getting smooth.
    Last edited by MisterMoo; 05-20-2015 at 08:51 PM.
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    illegitimum non carborundum Utopian's Avatar
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    Certainly to eliminate doubt, it would be best to start with a newly honed razor. You did not mention how you got this razor. Do you know if it was honed properly before you received it?

    If you do get the straight razor sorted out, then you might want to set the shavette aside for a while. The angles used are different, with the straight needing a lower angle. If you skip the shavette for a while you may find that your straight shaves will imorove over the course of a few weeks. Of course this will require a properly honed and stropped razor.
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  8. #8
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Quote Originally Posted by puketui41 View Post
    If you're skillful enough to shave with a shavette and not slice yourself up then my guess is its the razor, not you. As has been suggested, find a mentor with hones. Good luck.
    Yes, I'd think so too.

    If I am having trouble with the chin area I take it as a sign that the edge is just going or has just gone off being shave ready. It may shave the other parts of my face OK but when it hits the chin area which has the toughest whiskers on the face it has met it's match. A simple refresh on a finish hone may bring it back and if not then further honing might be needed.

    Bob
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  9. #9
    I used Nakayamas for my house mainaman's Avatar
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    My guess is your razor is not quite shave ready. It is good for the rest of the face, but on the chin it can't cut well.
    Stefan

  10. #10
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    OP

    I think the general agreement here is that your razor may not be 100% shave ready now.

    It could have come to that condition by not being shave ready from the start or got dull with normal use and/or from poor stopping.

    Hopefully somebody from Alberta can give you some mentoring or at least hone it for you.

    Bob
    Life is a terminal illness in the end

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