I tend to buy kinda basic stuff, as Gillette or Wilkinsons, but have to use the blade once then throw it away. I feel my skin is a bit too sensitive and i get red/rush/blood quite often if i don't do
I think I'm going to pamper myself a little this weekend and give myself a straight razor shave.
Here is a question for you cutthroat razor aficionados: For a brief period somewhere in the neighborhood of the late 19th century or so, somebody manufactured safety guards that you could attach to the blade of your straight razor. Do any of you have one of these guards, and what has been your experience using it?
I use a vintage Gillette Contour Plus. You can still buy the blades for around £9.00 for ten or you can buy a 10 pack of Aldi two blade disposable razors for 75 pence and carefully break off their blades - they are a perfect fit.
If you can’t find a reasonably priced contour handle then look out on eBay for Dr Dittmar Contour handles from Germany. You can also pay a couple of pounds for Indian made Gillette Vector handles.
I use a shaving set I bought many years ago in Tokyo that has a twin-blade razor, badger brush, and stand. Store-brand cartridges from a nearby pharmacy work fine for me. I dabbled in the luxury end of shaving soap and aftershave, but these days use the locally available Van der Hagen soap and Nivea Post-Shave.
I use a cheap badger brush, Walmart shave soap, a 1967 Gillete adjustable razor, and I just started using Feather blades. I usually finish off with a shave lotion, never an aftershave.
I use a cheap badger brush, Walmart shave soap, a 1967 Gillete adjustable razor, and I just started using Feather blades. I usually finish off with a shave lotion, never an aftershave.
Feather blades are great - I use them too - but for me they require a light touch, especially for the first couple of shaves. (Is there a smiley-face-dripping-blood icon available somewhere? ) I like the stiffer texture of a boar brush, although they eventually soften, and Mitchell's wool fat shaving soap.
A Colonel Conk pure badger brush, a Gillette Knack DE and I keep track at our local Dollar Store for the blades made in Israel, they are great! Soap is either C&E or Van der Hagen. Finish the shave off with Pinaud's Clubman.
I have a number of vintage razors by Gillette, Schick, Gem single-edge, and others dating from the '20s or '30s up to the '70s, and use those from time to time. I've tried straight razors, but there is too much maintenance involved for me, plus my eyeglasses get in the way. My daily razor is a Merkur Slant loaded with a Gillette Silver Blue blade. A badger brush applies a variety of creams or soaps, often Proraso green but sometimes Speick, Col. Conk almond, Tabac, Musgo Royal, Kiss My Face (which, despite the silly name lathers like nobody's business), or any number of other options. I do like a cream with lanolin, as it eases the glide over my coarse stubble, and in summer a menthol cream adds a cooling sensation.
I don't know if i responded to this a while ago: This may be a repeat.
Badger hair brush, many types of soaps and creams, and a depression era Gilette double edge razor. As for blades i've tried many. Feather is freakishly sharp. I've used others.
If i have time i give it a second pass with my grand fathers straight razor...made in Paris. I would expect that from...a Frenchman.
Great topic! I use a variety of products and equipment. My main soaps and aftershaves at the moment are Eufros made by Miguel aka Jabonman from Spain. As for brushes I have a variety of Silvertips Two Band Shavemacs, Paladin's, Rudy Vey's, Simpsons, and some other customs.
I mostly straight shave so I have a very large collection of straight razors, from vintage Double Ducks to modern customs by Robert Williams. As for double edge I use Fatboys on the vintage side and Pils, Blackland, Above the Tie, and some other offerings.
I love wet shaving, especially with straight razors.
Oster model 10 w/0000 head for the shearing.
Preshave rub up with proraso in the shower.
Proraso preshave.
Trufitt & Hill. Ultimate Comfort cream in a Becker scuttle.
Old West German boar brush
Merkur Futur w/Feather blade.
Dickenson witch hazel
AOS Lavender Gel.
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