L'Onset
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 94
- Location
- Spain,The Pyrenees
I've always shaved wet. Only tried an electric razor a couple of times long ago and didn't like the burning sensation on my face.
Through many years I used disposable or refillable shavers (i.e. gillette, wilkinson's and so on), but two years ago I decided to clean up and give a second life to a safety razor that belonged to my grand father. I have been using it on a regular basis since then (I am not a daily shave man, I prefer to let my facial hair to grow a bit before shaving, and my job is not very demanding on that matter)
But last year I decided to give a try to my -also- grand father's straight razor. The first shave was horrible. My skin looked as if i had a fight with a dozen of cats wraped in sandpaper.
I took it to a skilled knife-sharpener and he told me that this razor had never been used, it needed to be sharpened for first time to make its edge serviceable. He did so and now is my preferred shave.
Only if I need a quick shave in the morning I use the safety razor. Shaving with a straight blade is something different, you have to take it easy, make a ritual of it. It takes me 30 to 45 minutes to have a good shave. Is not as close as with a multi-blade, but is somewhat like driving a classic car. No power steering, no gps navigator, no air conditioning... but yet we like doing it.
Here are my shaving tools. The orange cardboard container is the original of the straigh razor. Is a Spanish "Filarmonica" with a double zero edge and hollow wedge profile. It's not made anymore. The producer went out of bussiness long ago.
Through many years I used disposable or refillable shavers (i.e. gillette, wilkinson's and so on), but two years ago I decided to clean up and give a second life to a safety razor that belonged to my grand father. I have been using it on a regular basis since then (I am not a daily shave man, I prefer to let my facial hair to grow a bit before shaving, and my job is not very demanding on that matter)
But last year I decided to give a try to my -also- grand father's straight razor. The first shave was horrible. My skin looked as if i had a fight with a dozen of cats wraped in sandpaper.
I took it to a skilled knife-sharpener and he told me that this razor had never been used, it needed to be sharpened for first time to make its edge serviceable. He did so and now is my preferred shave.
Only if I need a quick shave in the morning I use the safety razor. Shaving with a straight blade is something different, you have to take it easy, make a ritual of it. It takes me 30 to 45 minutes to have a good shave. Is not as close as with a multi-blade, but is somewhat like driving a classic car. No power steering, no gps navigator, no air conditioning... but yet we like doing it.
Here are my shaving tools. The orange cardboard container is the original of the straigh razor. Is a Spanish "Filarmonica" with a double zero edge and hollow wedge profile. It's not made anymore. The producer went out of bussiness long ago.