(This post was last modified: 07-01-2020, 07:03 PM by jmudrick.)
(07-01-2020, 06:05 PM)kingfisher Wrote: I reject the idea that modern methods of manufacture are better and therefore modern razors are better. Tell that to Eric, who spent the better part of two years working on trying to make a modern toggle, with a modicum of success, depending on who you are speaking with. Ask Rockwell hlw easy it is, using modern technology and know-how, to make a tto adjustable razor.There's a large group who associate vintage as meaning light weight , short handles, mild, and Gillette and modern with 130g long handled big gap razors which they imagine to be somehow better. I don't associate vintage particularly with Gillette and my 130g modern monster razors (ok 115g for Wolfman and Paradigm) , fine examples of industrial art, don't shave any better than my little Bakelite Shake Sharp or $15 Enders Speed. Corvettes are fine but I'll take the old Porsche thanks.
Gillette made the Toggle and then the Fatboy and the Slim, and made them well enough that many of them still function perfectly to this day. These were actually pretty sophisticated designs, and they work great. Even the humble and inexpensive Tech is a fantastic example of razor design that is, in my opinion, as good as any modern razor out there at any price.
If you have given a legitimate try to vintage razors and then modern and have decided you prefer modern, that's great. I think there are some people out there who reject vintage razors without really giving them a try, or who tried one when they were just learning and had bad technique, and then blamed the poor shave on the razor.
I have nothing against modern razors and have several of them in my den, so this is not an anti-modern razor diatribe. I feel that both modern and vintage razors can be wonderful.
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