Restoration is a quite discussed concept (see architecture) and different approches are possible.
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Restoration is a quite discussed concept (see architecture) and different approches are possible.
I think it depends. To me, some blades don't need any work. They wear their age well and part of the attraction of the blade is the feeling of age. Other blades need only minor work. Others beg for full mirror polish and new shiny scales.
IMO, they should be shined up as much as possible. If there is anything more than a couple dots of black pitting - gone, gold wash included.
Even if I buy a brand new Dovo again I'd be tempted to polish away the factory grind marks.
Mark
I'm not always a fan of the BRIGHT! SHINY! NEW! approach to razor restoration - sometimes a good original restoration, or a satin finish with rustic scales are called for IMO.
That said, I don't like black spots, but will tolerate some minor to moderate pitting if the pits are cleaned and polished.
Mark
hey, as long as I can shave with it, it's restored enough. I actually kinda dig razors that look older and beat up but shave well. (kinda like a sleeper in racing)
+1. I polished some a bit but I never remove much metal. I usually try to "stabilize" them and I remove rust that could be harmful but that's it. Btw. all my razors are in their original scales (I am a lucky bastard, I have some with minor cracks but they hold fine).
I don't know how to answer that either. I think it really depends on the condition of the individual razor and how I feel about it. Some I would go to the trouble of 'restoring' while others would be as jockeys said, "good enough to shave with". :shrug: I tend to lean toward original scales even horn with flea bites and stable cracks in the wedge end. (not in the pivot area) OTOH, some of the restores I have seen in the show & tell are phenomenal.