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Thread: Stropping technique fast or slow? use the fabric side or no?

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  1. #1
    (John Ayers in SRP Facebook Group) CaliforniaCajun's Avatar
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    Being able to keep the spine from leaving the strop when flipping the blade over is what has stabilized my stropping.

    Before that I'd get out of sync. I couldn't coordinate the flipping and changing direction. Of course a late flip means you cut the strop.

    I've got a new piece of leather on my English Bridle strop and I haven't cut it in a week or two.

    It took me harder to learn this than any other aspect of straight shaving.

    I haven't tried replacing scales, sanding and shining the blade, and other such things. Yet.
    Last edited by CaliforniaCajun; 02-23-2013 at 11:42 PM.

    Straight razor shaver and loving it!
    40-year survivor of electric and multiblade razors

  2. #2
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Quote Originally Posted by CaliforniaCajun View Post

    It took me harder to learn this than any other aspect of straight shaving.
    Yep. Stropping is Komplicated

    It's fun too!

  3. #3
    Enthusiast Gammaray's Avatar
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    The physicists among us know that friction and heat are definitely related to speed and will make a stropping stroke MORE effective.

    Faster is better as long as the touch is light and controlled throughout a perfectly even stroke.

    In other words, not too fast and definitely not too slow. That would be the Goldilocks stroke.

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