I've got my eye on a couple of auctions currently so hopefully they've not got too many watchers... My time will come!Took me about four weeks of training on cheap chunky Chinese blades before I was able to appreciate and really take advantage of the slick character of vintage full hollow blades.
Good write up. Glad you are still enjoying it albeit with some small issues. Angle is easy. You want the spines width away from your skin. Not wanting to teach you how to suck eggs, rather trying to help. Hope this does indeed help.Update from this Welsh lurker - Shaped beard by the way of shaving cheeks and neck, mainly. Cheeks went fine for 3 passes without a hitch, neck is still presenting with some 'razor rash'. The hair on my neck grows quite far down, is quite tough/short, lays relatively flat and is grain = up at the bottom, grain = down at the top and meets a bit under my jawline to go across inline with my jawline back towards my neck/ears (if you can envisage that difficult description).
Had a couple of 'pulls', rather than nicks. It was rashy and marginally bleedy which was remedied by use of an alum block (which I might look at changing, this one was beyond cheap and bit harder than a honey badger on heat). Cheeks are 'dolphin smooth' to coin FergieBilly's expression, neck leaving a bit to be desired.
I've narrowed my 'neck difficulties' down to a couple of issues:
(a) I'm struggling to see what I'm doing - a rugby injury circa 4 years ago means I have a metal plate under my eyeball which causes some double vision in extremes of gaze down and right.
(b) The razor doesn't seem to remove hairs when I'm attempting to remove shaving soap alone. E.g. with my cheeks, my aim is to remove the soap, the hair will come with it. If I try this on my neck, it seems to catch/snag, maybe because of the differences in grain and thickness? This is regardless of angle, from what I can gather. However, my angle may be way off and I can't tell at this early stage (another 'it'll come with time' point).
I'm sure it'll come with time! P&B Sanskrit is lovely to use, smells beautiful and far more protecting than the cheap soap I used previously. I'm already looking forward to using it again!
That's great, cheers Wayne. Any help is welcome! I'm trying to keep it a spines width as per Lynn Abrams' starter vid. Your comment reaffirms that tip about angles. It'll come with time for sure. Thanks again sir.Good write up. Glad you are still enjoying it albeit with some small issues. Angle is easy. You want the spines width away from your skin. Not wanting to teach you how to suck eggs, rather trying to help. Hope this does indeed help.
Cheers Wayne. It's not too bad so it shouldn't take too long to sort itself out. Thanks for the pointers! I think my eagerness gave me the lesson of 'don't shave daily', at least this early on. Diolch (thanks)!Personally I do not shave daily. I like to give my skin some recovery time. Scraping a sharp blade across your mug isn't too good for it regardless of what razor is used. You can try a cold compress. A few ice cubes in a tea towel and applied to the area for a few minutes or put a couple of Aspirin in some warm water, just enough to let the tablets form a paste then apply that. Hope it gets better soon.
Fortunately I wouldn't call this a 'major setback'. It was uncomfortable but I didn't push it to the point where I cut myself, where it lasted a week (it's all better today) or where I go 'oh what's the point?'.Wise choice skipping ATG, I shave daily but first weeks with SR it was WTG only, looking back I am quite impressed by my patience, it did pay off though, good shaves, better shaves, the very best of shaves, got there without major setbacks and enjoyed the journey.
Absolutely! I'm still enjoying it - learning limits and having setbacks is enjoyable for me, it's not dissimilar to my degree. Trial and error etcDon't forget wet shaving is supposed to be a pleasurable experience. If you make your face sore and get razor bumps then you are defeating the objective. Pussy footing is the way to go. There is nothing wrong with taking your time and learning slowly.
I know where you are coming from. If you stopped every time you fell off a bike you'd never learn to ride one. What's a grazed knee eh? Daliwch ati.Absolutely! I'm still enjoying it - learning limits and having setbacks is enjoyable for me, it's not dissimilar to my degree. Trial and error etcI think it's a stark reminder, having a bit of razor burn, that I should take it slow. Thanks for the reminder that slower = better in this instance! That's why I'm here, to have the guidance from those more experienced than myself!
Diolch yr fawr! Thanks a lot!
+1 on all the above. I've still got my L plates on. Sometimes my head is frazzled trying to figure out the correct angle s for various parts but it's getting better every shave. They say time can bring about a change Listen I aint seen a dog gone thing.I Used to Scoff at the Old Dictum that it Takes a 100 Shaves to Master an SR..
It Took Me Around 30 Shaves to be What I Would Say Pretty Competent with an SR..After around a 100 Shaves My SR Shaving was in a Totally Different Place..I Would Equate My 1st 30 Shaves with Passing a Driving Test & Dumping My L Plates as Being Signed Off as Being Competent to Drive a Car..
The 1st 30 Shaves for Me were Like Passing a Driving Test..It was My Foundation for Further Learning.. SR Shaving Just becomes Natural Like Driving a Car & that Doesn't Happen Overnight..The Remarkable Smooth, Close & Comfortable Shaves SRs have to Offer Comes to You With Time...You Cant Rush Time..
Billy
Funny thing is, I taught myself to right a bike! Many grazed knees and a couple of hours late and I had it down!I know where you are coming from. If you stopped every time you fell off a bike you'd never learn to ride one. What's a grazed knee eh? Daliwch ati.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?