(06-26-2018, 02:34 AM)EFDan Wrote: Just based on this post I want to buy one now for the absolute honesty really, and I wasn't knocking your handles BTW. I'm not a, "Brush guy." Some people are, "Razor guys," and I fall into that category. I HIGHLY doubt you are dying for customers from what I have seen.
Integrity on the part of a maker, in and of itself, doesn't make a brush functionally superior either. But it matters to me. Most of what supports the price of premium-priced shaving gear comes down to 1) subtleties that many (very reasonably) don't notice or care about 2) what goes on between the ears as distinguished from in a bowl or on a face. I know what I like, and I try to make it. Simple as that.
FWIW, I was a razor nut before I was a brush nut. I once bought about 60 vintage Gillette DE razors (mostly British-made) within six months. Back then I thought all the discussion that went on in brush forums was a little weird, almost creepy, like some kind of fetish. But I finally took a tumble down the shaving-brush rabbit hole. And what captivated my interest at the start was badger hair and knots. I bought 30+ high-end brushes (mostly Simpsons, Rooneys, and M&Fs) in under three months.
There is no substitute for personal experience. I'd much rather not sell a brush than have a buyer be disappointed. But it's pretty hard to know whether or not something will enhance your shaving experience without trying it, one way or another. When others say things like "this is better or that is better", often as not it reveals more about the subject than the object. I can say for sure that there are many things I like better than other things based almost entirely on subjective considerations. And I don't place value on razors or brushes just because they cost more. From May 2012 until October of last year the razor I used for over 98% of my shaves was a butt-ugly, brass, ball-end, Regent-style, British Gillette LC NEW that I paid about $12.70 for on UK eBay.
I didn't take anything you posted as a knock on the brushes we make. And there was no attitude in my response. Just level on the level, as John Prine would say.