I’ve discovered the way to achieve very long blade life. I won’t do this with all blades, though my shavette blades are $1 per blade and I have some unobtanium blades that I want to last.
After getting seven good shaves out of a Feather FHS10 from my OneBlade, I’m ready to publish the results. More precisely, there was plenty of life after seven shaves, though I like the GEMs and had discovered what I needed.
The Feather 10’s were good for me for two shaves without this process.
Here is how I do it.
So, after shaving I remove the blade. If there is a bunch of gunk, I’ll remove that with a Q-tip, though NEVER let the Q-tip touch the edge.
I have a little jar of rubbing alcohol. Holding the blade by the end, I lower into the alcohol and swish it back and forth. I may change ends and repeat.
I then set it where the edges don’t touch anything and let it dry. If it doesn’t dry fast enough I’ll use a q-tip or hand towel, though am careful to NOT TOUCH THE BLADE'S EDGE.
Now for the secret sauce. I hand strop the blade, Sometimes 3 times on each side, sometimes 6 times. THE KEY is to hand strop VERY LIGHTLY. Keep in mind that the edge of a razor blade is only a few atoms (or whatever those little things are) thick. The people on the Youtube videos I’ve seen press too hard, which will cause the edge of the blade to roll to the other side. A very, very light touch is what works well.
After getting seven good shaves out of a Feather FHS10 from my OneBlade, I’m ready to publish the results. More precisely, there was plenty of life after seven shaves, though I like the GEMs and had discovered what I needed.
The Feather 10’s were good for me for two shaves without this process.
Here is how I do it.
So, after shaving I remove the blade. If there is a bunch of gunk, I’ll remove that with a Q-tip, though NEVER let the Q-tip touch the edge.
I have a little jar of rubbing alcohol. Holding the blade by the end, I lower into the alcohol and swish it back and forth. I may change ends and repeat.
I then set it where the edges don’t touch anything and let it dry. If it doesn’t dry fast enough I’ll use a q-tip or hand towel, though am careful to NOT TOUCH THE BLADE'S EDGE.
Now for the secret sauce. I hand strop the blade, Sometimes 3 times on each side, sometimes 6 times. THE KEY is to hand strop VERY LIGHTLY. Keep in mind that the edge of a razor blade is only a few atoms (or whatever those little things are) thick. The people on the Youtube videos I’ve seen press too hard, which will cause the edge of the blade to roll to the other side. A very, very light touch is what works well.