• You are using the old High Contrast theme. We have installed a new dark theme for you, called UI.X. This will work better with the new upgrade of our software. You can select it at the bottom of any page.

Safety Razor PSA

Status
Not open for further replies.
Apparently a long time, if I read into your avatar correctly. ;)

Those are one step in the shaving evolution I skipped. I've shaved with an axe, (partial Viking ancestry is to blame) straight razors, very carefully, and went straight to the mounted Trac-II types. I have a beard, use a Gillette Fusion 5 blade setup for edging it, I try not to be a neckbeard.

Excellent :) I have a few straights including a vintage Ever-Ready, a modern Dovo and a Feather's artist club. A whole boat load of vintage DE, SE and the spectrum of designs including one, two and three piece. The Rocket is good, maybe a touch on the mild side. I tend to prefer razors slightly right of the middle of aggression/efficiency.

My go-to's over the past year or so include the Rockwell 6S/4 and Merkur Progress, both of which are excellent for workday morning shaves.

SDECQsl7vOo_BtEcyxf3VO0iyIsKKFoLWkAJ77nJvDIjRkXmD1Agx7hEELHCv_3Qm_85Mnw=w1190-h893-no?authuser=0.jpg
 
Guys, it's actually quite simple to not get nicked by a safety razor:
- Lathering - learn how to use a brush with soap/cream to make a good lather.
- Use a quality razor - Merkur, Muhle, Edwin Jagger (rebranded Muhle), Gillette... Don't start with the most aggressive one from the model offering, take your time to learn.
- Use quality blades - Russian made ones in St. Petersburg plant are quite good (Polsilver, most of Gillette, Astra), Feather are excellent.
-

I got some Gillette recently. My Derby blades shave much more cleanly.
 
I have used a safety razor for quite a while. I have several, but nearly always use a Gillette Fatboy. I get great shaves from a safety razor. 100 blades for 12 to 15 bucks is hard to beat.
 
Had a girl friend once that had her grandpa’s dedicated double edge sharpener

You clipped the blade in a holder and ran the handle back and forth and the machine kept the angle right and shoved the blade over a done Arkansas stone and water.

It seemed to work.

Once was salvaging an old house with my PaPa and pulled out a mirror fronted bathroom medicine cabinet only to have a be-gillian rusty double edge fall in my lap.

-kBob
 
I got some Gillette recently. My Derby blades shave much more cleanly.
Every razor and beard has it's own blade preference - for example, for me the green Derbys don't work very well. I find them to be dull and give me a harsh shave with a closed comb three piece Merkur, which is a mildly aggressive razor. Gave them a try with an old Gillette TTO razor, rather mild - also not impressed. But in this razor, the blue Gillette Platinum blades are a perfect match (again, for me that is).
 
Every razor and beard has it's own blade preference - for example, for me the green Derbys don't work very well. I find them to be dull and give me a harsh shave with a closed comb three piece Merkur, which is a mildly aggressive razor. Gave them a try with an old Gillette TTO razor, rather mild - also not impressed. But in this razor, the blue Gillette Platinum blades are a perfect match (again, for me that is).
I'm using the Derby Blacks.
 
I've never been able to use a "safety razor" without doing a nick here or there (and my beard is so sparse that shaving for me is an occasional adventure only..) but I do use lots of double bladed razors for other purposes... Nothing cuts finer than a brand new double bladed razor if you're a fly tyer working with spun and clipped deerhair and other similar materials - but still that double edge, hand held, is problematic when you find yourself bleeding on your work.... So... I learned long ago to break each blade in half lengthwise by holding the narrow end in a pair of nippers while flexing it back and forth until it cracks in two at each end -providing two blades that can be held safely, mostly...
There is this thing they call tape....

And there is no way on God's green earth that I will voluntarily start shaving again with a safety razor. Did it in boot camp because it was the only option but as soon as any other option became available I took it. Small torture devices is all they are in my mind.
 
My dad used one of those when I was a kid. But he started using disposable blades years ago. I have no idea what happened to his old razor. I do have a couple of straight razors around here that have family history but I'm not brave enough to try one of those.

I did run across a safety razor a few years ago at a yard sale for next to nothing and bought it on a whim. It came with a few blades and I tried it for a while. Once I got it adjusted right I managed to give myself a good shave without cutting myself. But it did take a couple of times to get it right.

I have a moustache and goatee with longish sideburns so I don't have a lot of face to shave. And they are the easy parts. Since I'm now retired I may only shave every 2-3 days so a blade lasts a while for me. I've been happy with the Harry's blades that I pick up at Walmart. Blades work out to about $2 each and will last a couple of weeks.
 
I have a moustache and goatee with longish sideburns so I don't have a lot of face to shave. And they are the easy parts.
Yep, same here. perfect for a safety razor. Even shaving every day I'm getting nearly a month of shaves from one blade.

Next time I buy on Amazon I'm going to get another 100 Feathers. I will likely have my shaving needs covered for years.

Funny thing is being forced to lather up and slow down has turned it from a chore for me to a ritual. I actually enjoy shaving now as it forces me to slow down for a minute.
 
I've been shaving with a safety razor since I got out of basic training in 2011. I use a Merkur razor handle it's more of the umbrella style instead of the butterfly style and I either use Japanese or German blades with a preference for German. So much cheaper and such a better shave.

Someone told me once that Kershaw made blades for safety razors but I've never seen any.
 
I have been using safety razors for about 20 years now. I am a cheap-scape so I migrated to the old safety razors and blades to save money. Turned out that I liked the shave and was able to use my dad's old razor. I now have several different safety razors and blade that I use in rotation. I prefer a good shave soap and brush for shave prep.

I have some MARLIN manufactured blades in my meager collection. Of course they are blued steel:).

My go to razor is a 1955 red tip Gillette which gives a great shave most every time.
 
All safety razors are definitely not the same. I had one for years that would eat me alive, even on the least aggressive setting. I just figured I was doing something wrong. I found an old one at a flea market that was in really nice good condition and bought it on a whim. It was worlds different. Even at the most aggressive setting, I could be much less careful and still cut myself much less.

Some years later, I started having trouble finding the "platinum chrome" blades I had been using and couldn't find anything else that worked as well. Simple solution. I have a full beard now and only use a razor occasionally to tidy up around my upper cheeks where my natural beard "border" is sort of ragged. I use a disposable for that and between the small area that needs to be shaved and the occasional use, one of them lasts me a very long time.
 
I am still using a Gillette Super-Speed that is as old as I am, date coded to 2nd qtr 1956. I load it up with Israeli Personna blades that I buy 100 at a time on the bay. A badger hair brush, and a mug with Col Conk Bay Rum soap, and I shave for pennies a week.

One thing that I notice these days is that everyone today wants to shave super close with multi-blade razors. I always shave with the grain, and don't want to get too close since I want to avoid ingrown hairs.
 
I started with a Gillette safety razor with Blue blades in the late '60s. I then went to an Injector and a double blade cartridge after that. Once the Mach 3 came out, I've used it ever since. Somewhere in the middle of all that, I went back to the old Gillette razor and Wilkinson blades with a soap mug and brush on a lark, but I just couldn't see any reason to leave whatever my current razor was and Edge gel. Working in construction, I ran a Norelco on my sleepy face and saved blade shaving for evenings out.

I get a five o'clock shadow about a day after I shave :), so it's not a heavy beard at all. Retired, I shave every two to three days, whether I need it or not.
 
All good stuff posted above. This past week it's been the Gamechanger .84OC. I've had it for a while but neglected it in pursuit of other numbers like the Merkur Progress, Rockwell 6S and various vintage. Riding the cap makes this a smooth (and efficient) operator.

MnXw1dm-N5U309DfaZOPWstwM7mznSQcZFvWmwM2Gf_43y2WGtKHqSR9mvirOWy2csS0kJg=w1200-h800-no?authuser=0.jpg
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top