Reading the My 100th Shave thread got me thinking about my journey (my thanks to bgremill for posting his experiences and to the others who posted as well). I started keeping a journal in a Word document, making note of anything and everything as I started shaving with enjoyment as opposed to "just another thing to do before I can have a cuppa joe". After reading bgremill's post, I went back and looked at my first couple of weeks' entries. I remember that my tools came from different places, and I had a brush and some TOBS from Amazon that came 2 days before the Merkur 34c arrived. So I used a brush with cream for lather and my Dorco Pace 6 or 7 blade whisker whacker. I noted that it was the best shave I recall ever getting. From there, things just got better.
There were ups and downs, some blood, some burn, and lessons learned. And in looking those entries over, I see Acquisition Disorder galore! So many variables changing all the time, adding new razors, and trying different techniques; it's a wonder I have any technique! In fact, it was only a month ago that I said to myself enough. Work with one razor for a month or two and only vary the soap or brush. Keep the same blade and razor combo and get your technique down. That worked well. It is now four weeks later and I feel confident with my razor and my technique. I consistently get a DFS+ with two passes. And today will be my 100th shave.
And here is the strange thought I had: what if I shaved with a cartridge and goo again, to see what I left behind?!
I can't do it. No courage to endure it, or even curiosity to see if it is as bad as my memory has made it out to be. I once read that life is too short to drink bad coffee. I feel that shaving has reached that point with me as well. If something isn't working well, why should I endure it if I have the set up that performs great every time?
So, are there any brave souls here that have gone back, for whatever reason? What did you find? Does traditional shaving provide you a closer shave than scraping a couple of dozen blades across your face?
There were ups and downs, some blood, some burn, and lessons learned. And in looking those entries over, I see Acquisition Disorder galore! So many variables changing all the time, adding new razors, and trying different techniques; it's a wonder I have any technique! In fact, it was only a month ago that I said to myself enough. Work with one razor for a month or two and only vary the soap or brush. Keep the same blade and razor combo and get your technique down. That worked well. It is now four weeks later and I feel confident with my razor and my technique. I consistently get a DFS+ with two passes. And today will be my 100th shave.
And here is the strange thought I had: what if I shaved with a cartridge and goo again, to see what I left behind?!
I can't do it. No courage to endure it, or even curiosity to see if it is as bad as my memory has made it out to be. I once read that life is too short to drink bad coffee. I feel that shaving has reached that point with me as well. If something isn't working well, why should I endure it if I have the set up that performs great every time?
So, are there any brave souls here that have gone back, for whatever reason? What did you find? Does traditional shaving provide you a closer shave than scraping a couple of dozen blades across your face?
- Eric
Put your message in a modem,
And throw it in the Cyber Sea
--Rush, "Virtuality"
Overloader of brushes, Overlander fanboy, Schickhead, and a GEM in the rough!
Put your message in a modem,
And throw it in the Cyber Sea
--Rush, "Virtuality"
Overloader of brushes, Overlander fanboy, Schickhead, and a GEM in the rough!