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Thread: Painful shaves

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    Member Justino14's Avatar
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    Default Painful shaves

    I'm still new with a straight razor but I don't feel like my shaves are improving. I concentrate on angle and pressure and do short strokes. I think my lather is on point because I've been DEing for over 2 years now. Just quite painful to shave with. Even when I do remove most of the hair on the first pass, the 2nd pass is really smooth but can't seem to cut all the hairs no matter what angle I take. I really feel like the blade isn't sharp enough. I did the hanging hair test and couldn't get it to work (I know this isn't the end all be all in proving sharpness).

    Now I know I can send out the blade to be honed by someone reputable, but I was wondering if this is a good chance for me to try my hand at honing. Now say I did end up rolling my edge when stropping or whatever, is going to a 12k hone, followed by CrOx and than stropping on linen/leather enough to get the edge back or do I have to go to a lower grit like 800 first? When you guys feel an edge just ain't sharp enough what stone do you start with? How many laps roughly on each medium? Does 5-10 strokes on 12k, followed by 5-10 on CrOx, followed by 40 linen/80-100 leather make sense?

    I figure if I totally fail I can just send it for honing.
    Last edited by Justino14; 06-07-2016 at 04:41 AM.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
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    If it isn't shaving smoothly chances are it is not shave ready. I would suggest you send it out. In the meanwhile pick up a couple, or a few, vintage razors in excellent or better condition. Get your hones and work on them one at a time. Use the pro honed razor to shave with and as a benchmark to compare your own efforts. That is the way I went about it and it worked for me.
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    Senior Member DoughBoy68's Avatar
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    +1 on what Jimmy said, he has been at this for a while and knows his stuff. Also, I would really concentrate on learning proper shave technique first along with stropping. Practice stropping using a butter knife and when you strop your razor for shaving lay your hanging strop on a counter top until you get proper stropping technique acquired. You can also practice shaving with a butter knife until you get that down. Also try stretching your skin and use almost no pressure on the blade.......the lighter the touch, the better the shave!

    Spend a little time checking out the shaving and stropping videos here on SRP. Wait until you get shaving and stropping down before even thinking about learning to hone. If you have a 12k hone handy you might give your razor some laps (50 to 100 very light) the 10 laps on the Crox and see how she does. Good luck and happy shaving!
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    Senior Member blabbermouth RezDog's Avatar
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    It is hard to say what it will take to fix your blade. Without a good look at it with a loupe it's just a shot in the dark. I would think that you would be further ahead sending it out. It is really hard to learn to shave and hone at the same time.
    Skin stretching as mentioned is also very important.
    Do you have hones?
    CrOx?
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    Member Justino14's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by RezDog View Post
    It is hard to say what it will take to fix your blade. Without a good look at it with a loupe it's just a shot in the dark. I would think that you would be further ahead sending it out. It is really hard to learn to shave and hone at the same time.
    Skin stretching as mentioned is also very important.
    Do you have hones?
    CrOx?
    I have a balsa wood with CrOx ready. I figured I was going to buy a 12k stone eventually. I have a pocket microscope but I wouldn't really know what to look for to be honest. I just felt at the end of the day it wouldn't hurt to try to hone it a bit and if it still didn't feel sharp I would send it off, but I guess that might be a bad idea as a beginner?
    Last edited by Justino14; 06-07-2016 at 05:18 AM.

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    Senior Member AlienEdge's Avatar
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    Don't go lower than that 800 grit if that is what you have to set a bevel. Do you have a quality name brand razor ? Good equipment will make it easier.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth RezDog's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Justino14 View Post
    I have a balsa wood with CrOx ready. I figured I was going to buy a 12k stone eventually. I have a pocket microscope but I wouldn't really know what to look for to be honest. I just felt at the end of the day it wouldn't hurt to try to hone it a bit and if it still didn't feel sharp I would send it off, but I guess that might be a bad idea as a beginner?
    At this point you should give the CrOx a shot. It could be all it needs. Look around the city for a 60X loupe. If the CrOx does not show up send it out and plan for the Seattle meet in September. That is probably the closest meet to you and the very best place for you to learn to hone.
    It is not that you can;t learn to hone by videos and trial and error, but it will be so much easier at a meet. There is usually one in Alberta in the spring but I have heard nothing from them, other than they are really busy.
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    Senior Member SRNewb's Avatar
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    I learned to hone while learning to shave. Restored my FIL's Boker and it needed an edge. Was reluctant to send it out for fear of losing it in the mail. His straight and DE is all I have left of him.
    The people telling you it is hard to do both at the same time are correct.
    I shaved with edges that were fairly comfy,, but were not quite as sharp or smooth as they could be, for about a year. Now, two years in, my edges are miles above what I started with.
    Get your razor pro honed. You need that benchmark to judge from.
    The advice to purchase a few good quality, inexpensive vintage blades to learn on is also spot on, IMO.
    Good luck, and I hope you have great shaves!
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    I Bleed Slurry Disburden's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    If it isn't shaving smoothly chances are it is not shave ready. I would suggest you send it out. In the meanwhile pick up a couple, or a few, vintage razors in excellent or better condition. Get your hones and work on them one at a time. Use the pro honed razor to shave with and as a benchmark to compare your own efforts. That is the way I went about it and it worked for me.
    I would go with what Jimmy says here. I know you'd rather fix the problem yourself, but the edge is obviously not shave ready and it takes experience to know how far back you need to go or if using Chromium Oxide is the right move or not. If the bevel got rolled, none of the finishing hones will help. Are you stropping before each shave? If so how many laps? When you strop is the razor staying on the strop?

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    Senior Member howdydave's Avatar
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    The first time you should absolutely get it honed professionally!
    That way, you will know what it is supposed to feel like with a good honing.

    I got an inexpensive straight razor that I knew was not shave ready to learn my honing on.

    I figured that I would teach myself honing on that and, if I ruined it -- no great loss!

    Turns out I got a Gold Dollar that needed major reduction on the body of the razor near the heel.
    I ended up learning quite a bit about straight razor design and what was needed to get a razor into user ready condition.

    That Gold Dollar was the best investment I ever made (next to my Norton waterstone starter set.)
    .
    If you want to learn about honing, there are all sorts of videos out there on youtube (mostly by regular posters here).
    Take a look at them before you do anything!

    see: Straight Razor Honing for Beginners
    https://www.youtube.com/results?sear...+for+beginners
    Last edited by howdydave; 07-03-2016 at 10:16 PM.
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