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Thread: Strop Dressing
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02-23-2008, 07:26 PM #1
Exactly! This is part of why I suggest guys use on of my strops a few weeks first. Over time the draw will develop, then, if one still wants it to have more friction of be more supple, then apply Neat's Foot Oil. Once soft it is not going back to being as firm as when new.
I do nothing to my own strops here at home, no dressing, just a rub with my hands.
TonyThe Heirloom Razor Strop Company / The Well Shaved Gentleman
https://heirloomrazorstrop.com/
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02-23-2008, 10:56 PM #2
I've found the best leather care products are made by Bickmore. They use no petrolium products or harsh chemicals. But for strops really less is the best. Maybe a little strop dressing or oil but only if the leather is dry.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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02-24-2008, 05:01 AM #3
I subscribe to the school of Leave Your Strop Alone. I don't put anthing on my strops. How they come from Tony Miller, Damon or classicshaving.com is how they remain.
Ernest
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02-24-2008, 05:25 AM #4
My house is dry as heck especially in the winter. So every so often, maybe twice a year, I see that my strop is drying out, even with the hand rub treatment. I just use a little of whatever Tony included with the strop I bought from him. It looks to be a lifetime supply.
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02-24-2008, 05:47 AM #5
- Join Date
- Mar 2007
- Location
- Saskatchewan, Canada
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- 878
Thanked: 5I used neatsfoot oil on an old strop and was impartial to the results. I don't know if Tony still does it, but at one point I had a strop shipped with a small bottle of Lexol. I like it, and it's generally well spoken of. I also use it on my leather jacket, and I just found a store that carries it locally.
For the most part, I use the ol rub-strop-with-hand method, but in these dry winter months and a rotation of 4 (and soon to be 5) strops, i sometimes feel like the rub method is too little. A dab of Lexol gives me piece of mind.
What exactly is in Lexol?
As for my boots (this isn't strop related), I bought a container of Sno-Seal, which is beeswax based and seems to be highly regarded along with Nikwax. Haven't applied it yet so I don't have an opinion quite yet. I was thinking about Nikwax, but I'm kind of old fasjioned and prefer something you actually have to rub in rather than spray on(not sure if theres a Nikwax paste)
Tony, what were the issues you have with Red Wing? (for my own curiosity)
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02-25-2008, 02:58 AM #6
- Join Date
- Apr 2007
- Location
- Detroit
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- 55
Thanked: 0YAY! Strops and boots are different animals. Strops do not spend time in the mud kicking things. So for your boots use the beeswax or Obenaufs or whatever but remember that old men call this "greasing your boots."
Strops do not require grease. They stay indoors and have specific use. The tannery went through a lot of effort to remove oil and fat from the leather, soaking it willy-nilly with whatever oil isn't necessarily improving it.