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  1. #1
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    Default Stropping technique

    YouTube - Razor Strop

    I saw this clip on Youtube and was wondering which technique is better, the one in the clip with a loose strop or a pulled strop ? (Sorry for the terms, cannot seem to remember the correct ones)
    The last thing I would liek to do is to scrap my razor and need to send it to the stone.

  • #2
    Junior Member fatpanda's Avatar
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    I think that this barber is probably so experienced that he can do this without rolling his edge, but hey I am a noob!

    I am also paranoid about screwing up my edge, so I keep my strop taught so there is less of a chance of the strop curving around the blade and rolling the edge. All the appropriate info about stropping can be found in the wiki to get you started.

    Practice flipping or turning the blade in your fingers first before you strop. Even better get a few days of practice with a dull blade if you have on lying around. Here is a nice video that shows the flipping/rolling/radio dial motion. I used this to figure out the blade flipping.

    YouTube - Flip a razor for stropping.



    There is a barber manual that JimmyHAD posted from the Wiki that has really good info in it about stropping. I just can't find the link.

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  • #3
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by fatpanda View Post
    I am also paranoid about screwing up my edge, so I keep my strop taught so there is less of a chance of the strop curving around the blade and rolling the edge.
    There is a barber manual that JimmyHAD posted from the Wiki that has really good info in it about stropping. I just can't find the link.
    +1, I keep a taut strop too. Here is the link.
    Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.

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    The Hurdy Gurdy Man thebigspendur's Avatar
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    With every operation we do involving straight use, prep and maint you will find guys who do everything "wrong" yet get perfect results. I think its experience which enables them to get away with it.

    For most of us the "proper" way is best.
    No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero

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    Senior Member tcharah's Avatar
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    Just what i was looking for!!!! THX for this thread! I got to improve on the strop

  • #6
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    In my opinion he commits at least two error:

    He has a loose strop.

    He lifts the spine on the razor (see 00:25-30 of the vid)

    I'm not going to get a shave from that guy.

    EDIT:

    I would get a shave from this guy:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gnqXS...layer_embedded
    Last edited by Seraphim; 08-05-2009 at 05:11 PM.

  • #7
    Filarmonica Matador Moleman's Avatar
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    After half a year of daily straight shaving and after having succesfully honed about 30 razors, I come to the conclusion, that stropping is the most complicated thing of straight razor shaving.

    I am stil experimenting with stropping. In the beginning I pulled my strop as taut as it can get and stropped the blade with a careful touch to the leather. Well, it works, but you can't get the maximum out of a properly honed blade that way. Seraphim's video helped me a lot. His strop is not extremely taut, but it isn't loose either. According to my experience, the strop should be held taut, but only just enough to be parallel to the floor. During stropping there should be a little sag. You can then still strop the razor flat to the leather's surface, but that little bit of give enables the leather to reach the bevel, so it can re-align the edge.

    Super-light touch, as I did for a long time is not enough. There should be a noticeable draw, you must here a stropping sound. The last days, I stopped my razors less carefully, not with brutal force, but with much more give in the strop and mor draw. They all gained incredebly in sharpness.

    I will continue this way, and see what happens. Of course there's always a certain risk of dulling an edge, but I am able to re-hone the blade then. If possible, I would recommend beginners, to practice with a dull blade, just to gett the right feel, just to see what has to be done, to achieve that special "stropping sound"

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    The Hurdy Gurdy Man thebigspendur's Avatar
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    The problem is not every razor makes that sound and not every leather provides draw as you strop. Horse does not. Its just a matter of being reasonable about it. I keep my strop so that there is probably a inch or so of deflection as you strop and use just enough pressure to get the job done. No more and no less. How much is that? Its all experience and very hard to explain.
    No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero

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  • #9
    Member AFDavis11's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Moleman View Post
    After half a year of daily straight shaving and after having succesfully honed about 30 razors, I come to the conclusion, that stropping is the most complicated thing of straight razor shaving.

    I am stil experimenting with stropping. In the beginning I pulled my strop as taut as it can get and stropped the blade with a careful touch to the leather. Well, it works, but you can't get the maximum out of a properly honed blade that way. Seraphim's video helped me a lot. His strop is not extremely taut, but it isn't loose either. According to my experience, the strop should be held taut, but only just enough to be parallel to the floor. During stropping there should be a little sag. You can then still strop the razor flat to the leather's surface, but that little bit of give enables the leather to reach the bevel, so it can re-align the edge.

    Super-light touch, as I did for a long time is not enough. There should be a noticeable draw, you must here a stropping sound. The last days, I stopped my razors less carefully, not with brutal force, but with much more give in the strop and mor draw. They all gained incredebly in sharpness.

    I will continue this way, and see what happens. Of course there's always a certain risk of dulling an edge, but I am able to re-hone the blade then. If possible, I would recommend beginners, to practice with a dull blade, just to gett the right feel, just to see what has to be done, to achieve that special "stropping sound"
    Well, for the love of God, there are finally 2 of us that think the same way.

    This is a good thread.

    I can only add that whatever you do you simply have to repeat it, consistently from that day forward with that razor. Its true that too much sag will dull the edge. Too much tautness and I sometimes find the stropping ineffective. With my strop if its really taut the strops imperfections and lack of flatness become highlighted. Its almost as if you suddenly need to lap/flatten your strop as well as your hone.

    Although I often find that after I shape a blade with a little sag I can strop with a super taut strop I have always been nagged about the historical documentation that indicates that the hanging strop was created in response to the full hollow razor, nullifying the paddle strops usefulness. This is a big clue, I think, in the theory that there is more to stropping a full hollow then just a board flat strop.

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  • #10
    Senior Member shorynot's Avatar
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    You guys have officially blown my mind. I have seen so many things in this thread that im going to have to try in regards to stropping. Im still so new to this that im not even sure if my stropping technique is right at this point.

    I must be doing something right though because im not butchering my face, or having and razor burn issues. And my shaves are getting progressively closer and closer

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