Results 1 to 10 of 21
Hybrid View
-
09-22-2012, 05:27 AM #1
sweet, since ill probably turn my guys over to Maxi there maybe i should wait till then before i buy anything, still nice to look at some options too lol
James -"I got into trouble once, and have remained there ever since"
-
09-22-2012, 06:20 AM #2
- Join Date
- Aug 2010
- Location
- Vancouver, BC, Canada
- Posts
- 1,377
Thanked: 275The reason there are so many options:
. . . There are a lot of different things that work.
$100 is about as low as you can expect to go for a complete kit.
Larry at whippeddog.com will sell you a honed straight razor, Poor Man's strop kit (with pasted strop), brush, and soap for less than that.
If you look through the "classifieds" here, you'll find occasional razors in the $40 range. Add a strop (e.g. Larry's, or one from Star Shaving) and brush, and shipping costs, and you'll be close to $100.
HOWEVER, if you do things that way:
. . . You'll have a trustworthy razor, and what you need to keep
. . . it sharp, and shave with it.
It's people who scrape the bottom of the barrel (with cheap new razors and poor-quality strops) who regret their initial purchases.
Charles
PS -- If you go to a meet, there may be opportunities to buy stuff at reduced prices. The ideal seller is somebody who says:
. . . "My wife says I can't bring any of this stuff home."
pps -- Kits from SRD are nice (and new), but pricier.
PPPS -- You can spend a whole lot of money on soaps, pre-shaves, balms, after-shaves, and so on. All you need to start with is some shaving soap, and you can buy Proraso (a "known-good" brand) for around $10 per tub (or tube).. . . . . Mindful shaving, for a better world.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to cpcohen1945 For This Useful Post:
syngent (09-22-2012)
-
09-22-2012, 12:29 PM #3
LOL Im new to straights, but not new to wetshaving, i have brushes soaps and creams galour, and i have a couple of straights too, it was just the strops pastes and such i was refering to here, ill keep looking around and feeding my curiousity, but i will certainly hold off till after the meet so i can feel some things out get some great advice and help a member whose wife wont let him bring anything home with him, you know so he doesnt get into any sort of trouble,
im a nice guy that wayJames -"I got into trouble once, and have remained there ever since"
-
09-22-2012, 12:55 PM #4
I'd advise going to a 3 inch wide strop from the start. You are less likely to hack it to pieces because you dont have to concentrate on doing x strokes AND stropping AND doing the finger flip at the end of the stroke. If you can remove one variable in the equation it makes learning much easier.
If you want to save some money at first I would go buy a 3inch wide 50 inch length piece of leather from Tandy leather. Cut it in half and you have one hanging strop length you can rig up and then chop the other piece in two. Mount them both on two pieces of 12 inch 2x4 and you now have two board strops to practice on. You can use one for chro paste later on for maintaining your razors.
34 dollars
http://www.tandyleatherfactory.com/e.../4523-190.aspxLast edited by Scookum; 09-22-2012 at 12:59 PM.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Scookum For This Useful Post:
syngent (09-22-2012)
-
09-22-2012, 02:12 PM #5
Thanks scookum ill add that place to my favourites look around,... so does one need a fabric side or peice as well ? see wool and felts out there two i was thinking you needed one leather and one fabric,.. but this obviously isnt the case is there a major preference on this ?
James -"I got into trouble once, and have remained there ever since"
-
09-22-2012, 02:23 PM #6
I also suggest just getting a strop for the first little while before trying pastes and such. Just the basics. Take it slowly, because this can get crazy pretty quickly.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to jdto For This Useful Post:
syngent (09-22-2012)
-
09-22-2012, 02:26 PM #7
Noted !, thanks for the warning lmao
James -"I got into trouble once, and have remained there ever since"
-
09-22-2012, 04:30 PM #8