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  1. #1
    Senior Member pmburk's Avatar
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    Default Nice find in a Gettysburg, PA antique store and a razor restoration project

    The wife and I were in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania this past week and we were browsing some antique shops. I got two straight razors for $26.00. One is a 1908 Geneva from New York ($8) (4/8 blade) in good condition, no pitting and the other is a Phoenix Razor by Spalding of Syracuse, New York ($18) (5/8 blade) in very good condition. Both are half hollow.

    I decided to embark on restoring a couple razors just to see if I can do it and add them to my shaving gear. I am starting with the Geneva, and so far I have removed the razor from the scales and I cleaned up the blade going from 150 grit paper to 12000 grit and the blade is very shiny, but there is a nick near the stabilizing piece. I made a new set of scales out of Cocobolo wood. I am now at the point of rehoning or rather restoring the blade.

    Here is the 1908 Geneva before I took it a apart and cleaned it up:
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    Here is the Spalding of Syracuse, N.Y. Phoenix (Anybody ever hear of this razor?):
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    I'll keep you posted on the progress of the 1908 Geneva.
    Patrick
    Last edited by pmburk; 07-18-2011 at 10:37 AM. Reason: Misspelled word, incomplete sentence, and cleaned up the grammar.

  2. #2
    Member Str8Raz0r's Avatar
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    The tips are missing from both blades, bizarre. Are they broken or part of the design?

  3. #3
    Senior Member pmburk's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Str8Raz0r View Post
    The tips are missing from both blades, bizarre. Are they broken or part of the design?
    Part of the design. I examined the tips under magnification and the metal was smooth in the "notch". If the tips were broken off, the metal would have been somewhat jagged. I plan on rounding them off.

  4. #4
    Senior Member medicevans's Avatar
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    It looks like they were square points but some one "muted" them by grinding them flat. It probably ruins any collectible value, but speaks volumes that these were used as TOOLS not as hobby pieces. Also, coming from the same shop maybe they were owned by the same person?

  5. #5
    Member Caydel's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by medicevans View Post
    It looks like they were square points but some one "muted" them by grinding them flat. It probably ruins any collectible value, but speaks volumes that these were used as TOOLS not as hobby pieces. Also, coming from the same shop maybe they were owned by the same person?
    That was my first thought as well. Both look to be in excellent shape; neither looks like they need more restoration beyond some simple polishing

  6. #6
    Senior Member pmburk's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by medicevans View Post
    It looks like they were square points but some one "muted" them by grinding them flat. It probably ruins any collectible value, but speaks volumes that these were used as TOOLS not as hobby pieces. Also, coming from the same shop maybe they were owned by the same person?
    Good points about the possibility that the razors might have been owned by the same person and possibility converted to tools. Do you think it's still worth the time and effort restoring and being able to shave with them afterwards? At least I'll get to learn how to hone with them. I do not plan to sell them, I want to be able to shave with them. By the way, they were not in the same display case.
    Last edited by pmburk; 07-18-2011 at 03:01 PM.

  7. #7
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
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    Barbers and some shavers sometimes slightly rounded the square points to make them a bit less likely to accidentally nick the skin while shaving. Those points have been more radically altered than what I've normally seen but could be honed up to be fine shavers.

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  9. #8
    Senior Member pmburk's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    Barbers and some shavers sometimes slightly rounded the square points to make them a bit less likely to accidentally nick the skin while shaving. Those points have been more radically altered than what I've normally seen but could be honed up to be fine shavers.
    So then it's worth the time and effort to restore them to become shave ready? I did make a set of scales for the Geneva out of some Cocobolo wood. Again, I want to remove that "notch" and make it a round toe. It'll be a great learning process for razor restoration. The store I got them from had a few more that I would like to buy for more restoration.

    After I finish the polishing, I will butter knife the edge and round off that toe and follow SRP's wiki on blade restoration to hopefully make them shave ready.
    Last edited by pmburk; 07-18-2011 at 03:11 PM. Reason: post script

  10. #9
    Senior Member medicevans's Avatar
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    I think maybe you misunderstood about my tool comment. Here at SRP and also at B&B, SMF, and some if the other various shaving sites, we go a little overboard with thinking of shaving as a hobby. Sometimes we accumulate 30, 40, 50+ straights or ten brushes or 70 types of soap, or or or.........you get the idea. Sometimes we tend to forget that 100 years ago shaving was just shaving. It might be like 100 years from now people playing on a fork and spoon forum. Maybe custom forks made from Damascus steel with fossilized carrier pigeon handles. Maybe they will have a "Meal of the Day" section! Lol. We think of forks as tools, but who knows 100 years from now.

  11. #10
    Senior Member pmburk's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by medicevans View Post
    I think maybe you misunderstood about my tool comment. Here at SRP and also at B&B, SMF, and some if the other various shaving sites, we go a little overboard with thinking of shaving as a hobby. Sometimes we accumulate 30, 40, 50+ straights or ten brushes or 70 types of soap, or or or.........you get the idea. Sometimes we tend to forget that 100 years ago shaving was just shaving. It might be like 100 years from now people playing on a fork and spoon forum. Maybe custom forks made from Damascus steel with fossilized carrier pigeon handles. Maybe they will have a "Meal of the Day" section! Lol. We think of forks as tools, but who knows 100 years from now.
    Actually I took the word "tool" literally because I have known some woodcarvers who convert straight razors into tools for a particular task. So when you mentioned "tool", that was the first thing that came to mind. I am also a hobby woodcarver, woodworker, and woodturner. :-) So no harm no foul here. But with your explanation, I now understand your use of the word "tool". I jokingly refer to my straights as my "arsenal" or "line-up." Since I started straight razor shaving and reading in this forum, for me, shaving has changed from a mundane necessity to an enjoyable past time.
    Last edited by pmburk; 07-18-2011 at 03:36 PM. Reason: misspelled word

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