(04-16-2019, 10:38 PM)jmudrick Wrote:No, accurate.(04-16-2019, 09:38 PM)Tbone Wrote: It will be interesting to see the Gillette study. I have not heard that before about gray hair. As for the ubiquitous common knowledge, it is often only common.Clever.
Quote:Not the reference i was thinking of but another:Thank you for that link. An interesting article, although I do not think it was worth the price. This article is very well researched and presented, and uses the article you cited as one of its references:
"If your beard hair is white, greying or red, curly, or coarse, allow more time for preliminary soaking to soften it. If it is dark, straight and fine, time spent preparing the beard can be shortened. This was confirmed in a four-year study made by Drs. Lester Hollander and El-bridge J. Casselman at the Mellon Institute, Pittsburgh., They showed that a sample of dark hair stretched (by softening) to 0.58% of its full length after soaking 20 seconds in water at 86°F. White hair in the same time stretched to only 0.10% of its full length."
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fu...cle/277849
Insights into shaving and its impact on skin
Wiley Online Library
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=w...11.10783.x
It makes no mention of age as a factor in shaving.
This article states that gray hair is less coarse than pigmented hair:
"Hair strands become smaller and have less pigment. So the thick, coarse hair of a young adult eventually becomes thin, fine, light-colored hair."
Aging changes in hair and nails
MedlinePlus
https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/004005.htm
Perhaps new information gas been discovered since the 1930s?