7 or 8 years.
Used carts for way too long. Used a drugstore brush and soap from the get go though.
Used carts for way too long. Used a drugstore brush and soap from the get go though.
Shave yourself.
-Todd
-Todd
(01-28-2017, 01:14 PM)vtmax Wrote: I was 21 when my father passed down all his Somerset Simpsons to me mostly made by Stan Archer in the original Nimmer Mill. So 25 years now. (50's approaching!) The shave a while later on Curzon Street cemented it.
The only issue I have with the younger gents is they are much quicker on the computer than I am!
(01-28-2017, 05:50 PM)Freddy Wrote:(01-28-2017, 01:14 PM)vtmax Wrote: I was 21 when my father passed down all his Somerset Simpsons to me mostly made by Stan Archer in the original Nimmer Mill. So 25 years now. (50's approaching!) The shave a while later on Curzon Street cemented it.
The only issue I have with the younger gents is they are much quicker on the computer than I am!
Oh so true!
(01-27-2017, 04:00 AM)Freddy Wrote: Ted, I, for one, enjoy the newbies and some of the questions being asked multiple times. We all started somewhere (in my case 11-12 years ago) and because an "old timer" took the time to answer a question from me that he probably heard more than once, I was able to grow. What makes this hobby so interesting is, indeed, the new bright-eyed members, the incredible new products that have surfaced in the last five years or so, as well as the classics that have been around for 100 years or more. There is always a technique that pops up that perhaps I hadn't tried before, even if it has been around for many years.
I understand your weariness; it happens. However, try coming at it from a different perspective and don't give up just yet.
(01-29-2017, 04:46 AM)Teddyboy Wrote:(01-27-2017, 04:00 AM)Freddy Wrote: Ted, I, for one, enjoy the newbies and some of the questions being asked multiple times. We all started somewhere (in my case 11-12 years ago) and because an "old timer" took the time to answer a question from me that he probably heard more than once, I was able to grow. What makes this hobby so interesting is, indeed, the new bright-eyed members, the incredible new products that have surfaced in the last five years or so, as well as the classics that have been around for 100 years or more. There is always a technique that pops up that perhaps I hadn't tried before, even if it has been around for many years.
I understand your weariness; it happens. However, try coming at it from a different perspective and don't give up just yet.
Very well stated, and a lot of truth to it. I guess I'm getting to be a crotchety old man. No offense to anyone... I hope that was understood from the get go!