Results 11 to 20 of 21
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11-20-2012, 01:12 PM #11
You can nick the strop even if you're flipping it (the razor) on its spine. For me, I have to flip the razor when I've come to a complete stop at the top (or bottom) of the strop. If I start the flip as I'm nearing the top (or bottom) I'll nick the strop every time. It just takes practice..
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11-20-2012, 01:32 PM #12
- Join Date
- Nov 2012
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- 44
Thanked: 2I'll bear that in mind. I guess if you haven't stopped moving when you complete the flip then out comes a massive chunk. Feeling a bit more confident with all the reading and advice so cheers guys. Hopefully Thurs or Fri I'll do a good job of it and have a go at the hair I'm building up.
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11-22-2012, 03:03 AM #13
If you cut or nick the stop is it ruined?
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11-22-2012, 03:34 AM #14
Re: Advice for first attempt at stropping
Well yes and no you dont wanna strop over a chunck or ideally any sueface that.isnt consistant all the way through. If you do nick the strop look in the library there is a whole section devoted to strop repair
Thank you,
Swerve
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11-22-2012, 04:35 AM #15
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- Jun 2007
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- North Idaho Redoubt
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Thanked: 13245Place the strop on the edge of a table or counter and practice the flip slowly and deliberately, the flip is where the secret is for stropping..
Pay attention to the spine watch the spine the edge will follow along just fine...
Search the term "Stroptober" there is a ton of info in that thread
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11-22-2012, 05:20 AM #16
Like others have said before, if you are that nervous, practice with a butter knife and an old pair of jeans on the leg of course. Practice keeping it flat, and the roll. You want your arm like a piston, push forward then pull back, not pushing down and sliding, find a rythm you like, trying to go slow and deliberate activates the stabilizer muscles to override the larger ones, and causes the shaking in the hands that leads to a cut strop, or pressing down to compensate, that's when you will roll the edge.
Mastering implies there is nothing more for you to learn of something... I prefer proficient enough to not totally screw it up.
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11-22-2012, 08:09 AM #17
- Join Date
- Aug 2010
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- Vancouver, BC, Canada
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Thanked: 275If your timing is off a little bit, you'll flip the razor when it's moving in the wrong direction.
The correct timing requires that you start the flip (lifting the edge) with the razor moving in one direction, and finish the flip (setting the edge against the strop) with the razor moving in the other direction.
It's easy to say, and (believe me!) not so easy to do consistently. I haven't nicked my strop in a while, so it _can_ be practiced and learned.
. Charles. . . . . Mindful shaving, for a better world.
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11-22-2012, 11:34 AM #18
Sanders83, I'll offer an unconventional alternative to the excellent advice given here. Go to a thrift shop, buy about 5 of the rattiest looking leather belts that you can find. Make sure they are cheap. Then go to your kitchen and pick up the sharpest knife you have, or borrow a razor sharp knife. Now go outside in a safe area and securely lash the belts to a low horizontal branch of a tree. Finally start yelling as loud as you can: Mind the Spine, Mind the Spine....simultaneously hacking the hanging belts with your knife...shredding them. By the time this exercise is over I predict, when you return to razor and strop, you will be stropping with verve and style.
"Call me Ishmael"
CUTS LANE WOOL HAIR LIKE A Saus-AGE!
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11-22-2012, 07:35 PM #19
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- May 2006
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- 2,516
Thanked: 369The best way to learn how to strop is to start stropping. All of the advice will help guide you, but just like the first time riding a bike, all of the best advice (pedal faster, steer straight) didn't prevent falling down, or crashing into a wall... And using training wheels really didn't help much either. Once they came off it was a whole different ball game. Same with razor stropping. You can practice with butter knives and old belts, but at some point you will have to try using an actual strop and folding razor, and that's when you will really learn. You may damage a few strops along the way, or not, and dull a razor. But that's just how it goes.
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11-23-2012, 03:02 AM #20
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- Jan 2007
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- 373
Thanked: 31Keep in mind that most strops are narrower than you razor for a reason: it makes the X-pattern movement more natural, and I actually find it easier to use than a wider strop (some others disagree). A wide strop can easily be slightly convex or concave across, so that going back and forth, you won't cover the whole edge. Doing the x-pattern on a narrower strop covers the whole cutting edge.