Lol great
Lol great
LmfaoOooooffffffttttt!!!!!! it's like looking at a photie of wee Jimmy kranky. I would'ny ride that into battle.
@Drew71-this guy certainly did though lmfao lol & I bet his Morning Wood aftershave still keeps him feeling nice & fresh LolOooooffffffttttt!!!!!! it's like looking at a photie of wee Jimmy kranky. I would'ny ride that into battle.
Lmfoa
LmfaoAaaah, sorry mate...
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Yes, what a relief to be back on topic..., I think if you're familiar with DE shaving & have done it for a while & technique is no issue & you're not getting a comfortable shave with the razor, don't use it. I don't believe in giving yourself time to 'get used to' a particular razor. If it doesn't work first time for you, it probably never will.
I think that's true if you're new to DE shaving. Almost any razor, be it mild or aggressive will almost certainly leave you with discomfort in some way or another until you get your technique right. However, if you're used to DE shaving, then as I said previously, you can pretty much tell if a razor's going to be good for you straight away. What happens I think to some people is that they try to make the progression from say, really mild to aggressive, too quickly without giving themselves time to dial in their technique properly.That's what I posited on another forum and received the other two answers back to me. And started a second crap fest in the same thread.
It just seems that for the new shaver starting out with little actual in person help, they keep getting told to "put the un pleasant razor away and go back to it in a few months and try again". Ironically they are normally told to wait long enough for the standard allowed number of days to return the item to expire. And then try it again.
some razors and soaps are given a "status symbol" as being able to use them safely, that it creates a stupid logic loop in which a person is inspired/directed by others to shred their face with a bad for them razor, then wait a few months for the skin graft to take, and then repeat.
I know it helps with razor sales. A lot of folks sell off the un pleasant razor for a huge loss, and then a few months later buy it again in the hopes that the first one was damaged somehow, or that with the hope they have changed their lathering or shave technique enough that they can get a shave that doesn't need a visit to a plastic surgeon...
and then when it doesn't work out again, they sell it, then they wait a little bit longer and buy it again at forum direction...