New acquisition:
Attachment 310415Attachment 310416
Can't wait to try it out.
Thanks Tony
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New acquisition:
Attachment 310415Attachment 310416
Can't wait to try it out.
Thanks Tony
Tony’s strops are impressively made with great attention to detail at all levels
Trying to talk him out of one this eve. One just ain't enough!
I've always known his work by reputation but I've never used one of his strops before. That is one fine piece of workmanship and I thought quite affordable too.
Oh yeah. Like the backdrop? That's my pillow. My wife gave the pillow case to me for my birthday. She had my sister in law make it. She loves me.
Very cool pillow-case, and you'll never go wrong with a Tony Miller strop. I ignored conventional wisdom (as I usually do) and got one of his fine strops starting out. Very few nicks because I was very careful on it until I got up to speed. Great choice!
I love the natural color of your strop. I have several strops that I paid three times as much for, but Tony's workmanship is just as good and I enjoy using his as well as any of them.
Is it just me? One thing I didn't foresee was having to learn a new strop. The first few times I used it I seemed to have dulled my edge in particular using the fabric. I have never really used a fabric strop before. I think I must be rolling the edge.
I feel dumb that this surprised me. In fairness I have only had 3 strops besides this one including the old belt my father used... actually that worked pretty well but it a little narrow and cracking really badly from age. I guess I need to heed the hockey cliches: simplify my game. Go back to basics. Get pucks in deep...well, maybe not that one.
That didn't come out the way I meant for it to sound. Maybe I should say that I am somehow dulling my razors with it or I am diminishing the shavability of them. I in no way want to suggest that there is anything wrong with the product because I think it's absolutely fabulous. For some reason I'm just not proficient with it yet.
My main strop is an Old No2. As with any fabric strop you need to keep the weight on the spine. If you lift the spine you've hosed the edge. Too much weight on the spine you simply lift the edge off the strop and count an ineffectual stroke.
Go easy with the fabric side until you get the hang of it. For starters, keep it at hip level, just rotate on the spine (rolling like a pencil if you can), and push the razor back and forth with no downward pressure.
If you're moving from a strop with a heavier draw, you might be using too much pressure on the edge until you find your feel. Very unlikely you've done enough damage you need to go and rehone, more likely you just need to lighten up and you can recover the edge. Try that for 50 strokes or so, then move to leather, and see how it feels.
Thanks for the helpful comments. I think I have worked through using the leather which Is fabulous to use. I haven't touched the cotton much yet. I need.to bone up on my reading about it but those suggestions definitely pointed me in the right direction. I have intended to paste one side but haven't done it yet because I know that is not a place you can really turn back from once it's done.
That's up to you of course... I've never pasted. I play around with hones enough to maintain my own edges, and shoot me a PM if you want some of my lame opinions on cheap finishing stones. You're not far away from The Superior Shave in Jacksonville, and while Jared has just recently shut down his brick and mortar storefront he's a wealth of knowledge (and 30% crazy), his online operation is going strong, and he'll almost certainly meet you in person to assist.
I have two Tony Miller strops and love them both for very different reasons. One is a 3" cotton/red latigo (I'm not sure Tony makes those anymore as he seems to like the roughout better, but he may comment). The other is a 2 1/2" linen/horsehide. Personally I would never paste either for fear of contamination, and would go with a reasonably priced paddle strop if that's where you want to go. Folks seem to use a lot of the honing films as well, which would probably work as a cheap touch-up (and way cleaner than pastes)... someone else may chime in but it's also getting off topic.
In any case, glad you're getting the hang of that strop. It will service you for decades with proper care (which is really... keep it clean and oil very very infrequently). Try the light-to-no pressure on the cloth side, and gradually increase slight pressure on the spine until you're getting great results.
Fresh cotton can be a bit harsh. So go lightly on it at first until you find how to get the best from it.
I just got Tony's Steerdovan. Talk about fast! Its like it has no draw at all. I know with time it will slow down some. Its a nice piece of leather. The real linen type secondary strops are wonderful to use. I only have a couple of them. Try to pick up one of them and you wont want to use anything else. Tony sells them but they cost more than the cotton.
Okay. I took the advice you guys gave me on the cotton strop with a project I just finished and honed. After the bevel set and 4k/8k pyramid I ran 50 , 30, 50 on the cotton, suede side and smooth side and it shaved as.good as any razor I've got and better than most even after being honed, finished and stropped. Maybe it wasn't as complicated as I was making it out to be. Thanks guys.
Ive still been working through learning the cloth strops. I think I had a eureka moment the other day though. What seems to be the key, for me at least, is to keep Bob Ross in mind when he uses his one inch brush to smooth and soften paint he just applied and his catch phrase, "2 hairs and some air." It seems like they work best when you do it almost like you're pretending to strop: just barely touching it with virtually no pressure at all. Funny how you can learn something in a few minutes and spend a lifetime trying to master it.
I love Tony's work. His is the only hanging strop still in my shave den.
I have two of his strops and love them. I keep waiting for someone to do a comparison between one of his and a Kanayama. The Kanayama's attract a lot of money. i wonder how they compare.