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Thread: Help with shaving a beard line

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    Member RiseAbove's Avatar
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    Default Help with shaving a beard line

    I currently have a beard that i may keep for a while and want to use my straight razor to detail and clean up the beard lines. What technique should i use to clean up the cheek line? Should i be shaving straight down in small perfectly vertical strokes until i hit the line using only part of the razor, or should i follow the beard line down at the angle the beard line goes in small strokes? Also, under my neck, the stubble grows towards my chin, so should i go with the grain of the stubble upwards and finishing at the beard line, or start at the beard line and come down against the grain. I would think it would be easier to get a more detailed line starting at the beard line and coming away, but that would mean going against the grain.

    Sorry in advance for how confusing this sounds!
    Scar tissue is stronger than regular tissue. Realize the strength, move on - Henry Rollins

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    Senior Member blabbermouth tcrideshd's Avatar
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    That's going to be a hard one to answer, as we gain more experience the technique gets personal. You will learn your face and come up with a system.

    As for under the jaw, or anywhere else we have guys who start on an ATG pass. There are no rules, so try it both ways.

    I tend to get clean beard lines no matter which way I go, good luck. Tc
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    Member RiseAbove's Avatar
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    Yeah, i guess it's a matter of trail an error. I was thinking under the chin maybe getting a tight beard line by initially coming away from the beard line maybe like an 1/8th inch against the grain, then cleaning up the bulk working towards the grain. Thanks.
    Scar tissue is stronger than regular tissue. Realize the strength, move on - Henry Rollins

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    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    The hard lesson of beard lines

    That whole bit you read about Stretching the skin yeah that doesn't really work so well when you want perfectly straight lines

    You have to learn to do a first pass while streching and get close to what you want then finish the perfect lines with the skin relaxed


    Something my Barber taught me in 1981 during my first SR shave

    "If you want straight lines you need to use a Straight Edge" been using one since
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    Member RiseAbove's Avatar
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    Good advice. I'll start with a few 'fake' beard lines to get used to it...start at a high cheek level and work down using the one pass method.
    Last edited by RiseAbove; 06-02-2016 at 01:41 AM.
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    Scar tissue is stronger than regular tissue. Realize the strength, move on - Henry Rollins

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    32t
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    Experiment....

    The steering wheel will not notice if you are 1/8 inch off.......
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    Senior Member dinnermint's Avatar
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    My preference was always to let the beard grow out, even out the growth with a good quality beard trimmer, then start the lines by trimming all unnecessary face fuzz without the guard. Then just shave off the short stuff, stretching however you need to.
    Last edited by dinnermint; 06-02-2016 at 07:20 PM.
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    Member RiseAbove's Avatar
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    I tried that a little while ago, and i can see it working well, but my beard trimmer blades are shot. What beard trimmer did you use? I'm looking for a good quality set.
    Scar tissue is stronger than regular tissue. Realize the strength, move on - Henry Rollins

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    32t
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    You can sharpen beard trimmers also!

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    Member RiseAbove's Avatar
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    I have a cheap Andis trimmer and I don't think the blades can be sharpened, i may be wrong. I paid $30 for the trimmer set, a new blade replacement is $28. Figured i'd try another set.
    Last edited by RiseAbove; 06-02-2016 at 11:11 PM.
    Scar tissue is stronger than regular tissue. Realize the strength, move on - Henry Rollins

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