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08-02-2014, 06:22 PM #1
Strop Backing Material Comparison?
Howdy! I'm very new to straight shaving and currently have a very basic strop with smooth leather on one side and unfinished leather on the back. I'm looking at getting a better strop eventually once I get all of my practice nicks out of the way (none yet, knock on wood) but I'm confused on the differences in backing materials.
Some have linen, canvas, synthetic webbing, felt, etc. I know you can get by with something as basic as old blue jeans, but what are the differences between some of the materials above in regard to results?
Also, should I ever use the unfinished side of my current leather strop?
Thanks in advance for the information.
Josh
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08-02-2014, 06:35 PM #2
Based on my experiences do not use the unfinished side of the leather.
As to the other question, it becomes a personal preference. Some shavers don't use the linen, etc at all. If you get a vintage strop it will most likely have old linen with it. A good scrubbing with a household brush and cleaner will give more years of life to it. Some like linen, some like canvas, others the synthetic and still others just the felt. In my instance my daily stropping included both vintage linen and felt before leather. As you can see your choice, your experience. As you progress and get to try the different surfaces you will find what suits you, and only you.
And above all, it's the quality of your stropping that counts the most in these equations."The sharpening stones from time to time provide officers with gasoline."
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08-02-2014, 06:46 PM #3
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08-02-2014, 07:45 PM #4
Quality stropping is getting muscle memory to keep you from nicking and cutting your strop. Developing the optimum pressure on the razor (basically as light as a feather is optimum). As example, when I first started stropping I was ruining a lot of edges right off the bat because I was using a heavy pressure on the razor in its contact with the strop. That's when I realized that I have a natural tendency to have a heavy hand. It took a lot of super awareness of how heavy my hand was to retrain myself to use a feather light touch when using a strop. It has now become muscle memory and I barely think about pressure level any more. That lapped over to shaving where I adopted someone's maxim of pressure control on a razor, "Shave the lather, not the face".
"The sharpening stones from time to time provide officers with gasoline."
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Filobiblic (09-06-2014)
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08-02-2014, 09:47 PM #5
People use all kinds of materials for the cloth component but historically linen was really considered the best material to use. I've seen mentioned a knobby silk material that was used in very high end strops and was very expensive. It was considered to be the best you can get. I've never actually seen one though and was rare even back in the day.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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08-02-2014, 10:32 PM #6
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Thanked: 5I remember our local Barbershop (west side San Antonio) used "a Firehose strop". As a kid that was fascinating to me...
It wasn't the thick heavy hose like on Firetrucks. It was that thin Firehose we had in schools hallways back in the 60's.
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08-02-2014, 11:52 PM #7
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I would describe "quality stropping" as doing 40 to 100 strokes on the strop after which the razor edge shaves sharper and smoother than it did before you stropped it.
Improper stropping technique can literally destroy your razor edge. Solicit more descriptions on the forum for a better understanding of the process..................JERRY
OOOPS! Pass the styptic please.
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Hthomas (08-02-2014)
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08-03-2014, 12:09 AM #8
Take a peek at this post and video: http://straightrazorpalace.com/video...ing-video.html
Just call me Harold
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A bad day at the beach is better than a good day at work!
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08-03-2014, 12:11 AM #9
OP here. Any opinions on Felt? I've been looking at the OVB strips at Star Shaving that use this as a backer.
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08-03-2014, 12:22 AM #10
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