Results 11 to 20 of 30
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06-23-2013, 12:18 AM #11
- Join Date
- May 2011
- Location
- Mount Torrens, South Australia
- Posts
- 5,979
Thanked: 485Two years of investment with no good outcome must be very frustrating for you. It could indeed be your stropping, but to prove that you'd need to send the razor back out to be honed again and then use it without stropping it. That would only work if the razor made it from the honer to you without much delay and in a dry environment (i.e. if it took a week in the post and it was humid weather, for instance, the edge may very well degrade over that time. Your profile doesn't tell us where you live. What I would do if I were you is try to find someone from the forum near you so you can visit and have a tutorial session. Considering how frustrated you may be at this point in time a road trip might in fact solve all your problems. There are so many variables, but we might gather your prep is not too bad as you can shave with a Feather razor; so your angle, pressure etc may also be quite good.
Why not add some data to your profile and you might find someone jumps in and says "Hey, you're just down the road from me; what say we get together and I show you some tricks of the trade?"Stranger, if you passing meet me and desire to speak to me, why should you not speak to me? And why should I not speak to you?
Walt Whitman
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06-23-2013, 04:29 PM #12
- Join Date
- Dec 2012
- Location
- Long Island NY
- Posts
- 1,378
Thanked: 177The feather may be sharper I know but a properly honed and stropped straight is MORE then sharp enough to shave your stubble to the skin. I've wrestled around with sharp, trying to see if I can hone one like a feather de blade, but the reality is you don't have to. And I prove this everyday with a bbs shave with no irritation, weepers etc. My neck stubble is like wire.(I'm 48 years old)And it grows sideways and flat but at the end of the shave, its all gone. And that's why I love a straight so much. I love the whole process, honing, stropping experimenting and learning. I'm only 9 months in and I don't know nothing compared to the experienced guys here, but I know enough to hone strop and get a bbs everyday.
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06-23-2013, 11:14 PM #13
First, I accept that some shavers can get a BBS shave from a straight. My point is not to malign straights as a shaving tool but rather to not focus solely on the sharpness of the blade when a shaver has problems cutting their beard. The fact that an individual shaver gets a BBS from a straight does not prove that the blade is sufficiently sharp to cut every man's beard smoothly that close to the skin.
I don't bother trying for BBS with any razor. My face is not smooth enough to remove every hair to skin level without removing skin also. Sharpness is not the only factor in determining the quality of shave one can get with a straight or any shaving tool for that matter. The goal is to get the best shave you can given your face, beard and tool used.
I realize that shaving forums do proselytize and that's great. This forum does so for straight razor shaving. But there are many posts from people having problems using straights (and on other forums other shave tools) where the advice centers on digging deeper into the various skill sets required to use the tool. I believe we should be more sophisticated then that. We should promote getting the most comfortable and acceptable shave from or chosen tool and be willing to acknowledge that for some shavers the straight (or DE, SE, …) may not be the way to go.
Jameshob can get the shave he is looking for using a Feather AC razor but not a straight. This tells us he can shave with an exposed edge shaving tool (he can find the cutting angle and maneuver the blade) and that blade sharpness is the difference in the two experiences. I suggested he work on his prep. Why prep as opposed to honing and stropping skills. I know he will get the usual advice about improving blade sharpness. But actually improving blade sharpness to the level needed for his beard may not be realistic for him given the time he can devote to it and/or his skill level. Not everyone can maintain and use tools at a high level of competence. I am making no claim that I can. Most of us are in the middle somewhere. Under these average circumstances, a greater improvement in the shave might be obtained by spending more effort finding a way to improve beard preparation. If the beard is easier to cut, then the shave will improve given the shaver's current blade maintenance skills and they can still work on improving those.
Is it helpful to the new straight shaver to be promised a consistent BBS shave with just a splash of water and a good lather when we cannot know what the shaver's challenges really are? I enjoy using my straights much more since I changed my goal from BBS to the most comfortable/enjoyable, acceptably close shave I can get. This is now my goal no matter what shave tool I am using.The tale is doon, and God save al the rowte!
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06-23-2013, 11:27 PM #14
- Join Date
- Jun 2012
- Location
- Land of the long white cloud
- Posts
- 2,946
Thanked: 580Well said, as soon as i stopped trying for the perfect shave, they just got progressively better.
Into this house we're born, into this world we're thrown ~ Jim Morrison
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06-23-2013, 11:43 PM #15
I've been using straights for over two and a half years, honing them myself the entire time. It is still true, however, that I can get a closer shave with a Feather SS folder than I can with any of my straights. I just use that as a model for a perfect shave. The shaves I get with my straights are extremely smooth and totally acceptable, but the sharpness of the Feather blades is not something I expect to replicate with hand honing a straight razor. The difference is getting smaller the more I hone and shave. As to the OP's comment about trying straights "off and on", I know that it took me six months of dedicated effort every day to get to the point where my shaves were really close. If he can get a good shave with a Feather razor, then his technique is certainly adequate. Any resulting differences between those shaves and what he might get from a straight razor are a result of differences in sharpness. I think that just has to be accepted. The Feather blade sets a high standard among replaceable blades, and in a Feather SS it is reasonable to expect that it can give a shave unmatched by a regular straight razor.
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06-24-2013, 12:02 AM #16
- Join Date
- Dec 2012
- Location
- Long Island NY
- Posts
- 1,378
Thanked: 177I understand what you are saying. Everybody is different I know. Different beards ,skin ,skills etc. I can only share what my experience is. Nobody can judge your shave but you. And whatever works ,works.
Last edited by bill3152; 06-24-2013 at 12:11 AM.
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06-24-2013, 12:34 AM #17
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Location
- North Idaho Redoubt
- Posts
- 27,034
- Blog Entries
- 1
Thanked: 13247One dumb question...
How much sharper do you guys think a Feather is then an Extra Hollow straight razor in microns ????? any guesses ???
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06-24-2013, 12:36 AM #18
- Join Date
- Nov 2012
- Location
- Across the street from Mickey Mouse in Calif.
- Posts
- 5,320
Thanked: 1184My 2 cents is parts of what everybody else is saying. If your switching from a feather to a straight than I would use only the straight to give it an honest chance. Hopping back and fourth sounds bad for both experiences. If the straight just doesn't do it for you than give it up. Sounds like you were perfectly happy with the feather ?
Good judgment comes from experience, and experience....well that comes from poor judgment.
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06-24-2013, 12:40 AM #19
- Join Date
- Nov 2012
- Location
- Across the street from Mickey Mouse in Calif.
- Posts
- 5,320
Thanked: 1184
I would bet the straight is sharper. If not it certainly is more stable, as in, less likely to bend under any pressure. I haven't been at this long but I have personally heard more stories of guys getting better shaves with a straight after switching as opposed to the other way around.Good judgment comes from experience, and experience....well that comes from poor judgment.
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06-24-2013, 01:11 AM #20
- Join Date
- May 2013
- Location
- New Delhi (India) / Europe
- Posts
- 48
Thanked: 3Taking an educated guess here; feather maybe around 300-500 Angstrom so .3-.5 micron (I think of microtome blades as a reference but they're obviously made to even tighter tolerances than a DE)? Straight would very much depend on the honing/stropping I presume. Theoretically the same or even better but how consistent would the width be along the edge? I don't think the 'sharpness' at a particular point is the only variable at play but am ready to stand corrected b/c I freely admit to not being anywhere close to an expert.
It is preferable to have a criminal as a servant rather than a fool because a criminal's actions are at least predictable.