I was watching a Michael Freedberg Youtube video where he was reviewing Le Pere Lucien soap and the Rockwell 6S razor. I really like Michael's videos, they're well done and I appreciate his demeanour and dry wit "there's enough lather to shave the village!" In any case, he commented that he would appreciate if the Rockwell were date stamped or coded so people could track that and know it because there are people who like that. This resonated with me because I have 3 Rockwell 6S razors, 4 if you count the one I bought for my son. I have the first one I bought a few years ago on the recommendation of Aurelian28 , I have a second one I haven't touched because I've been thinking of getting it ceracoated in some interesting colour combination, maybe Star Wars themed, and I have the Limited Edition black razor. I'm not really c\razu about the black coating that Rockwell used because its not only a flat/matte black but the texture is nit all that smooth. I don't mean that its like sandpaper - you'd have to touch it to know what I mean. Flat paint is never as smooth to the touch as gloss. The black coating used by Italian Barber in his various black Razo-Rock offerings is better. The original Black Mamba and the Baby Smooth for example. What I did notice, however, was that the black Rockwell seemed to shave a bit smoother at the same blade and setting than the standard razor. Weird I thought? What would account for that? Could the coating have changed the geometry ever so little that it became a smoother shaver? Could the molds that are used in the MIM process gradually wear over time to do the same thing, ie, change the geometry?? This is when it occurred to me that its possible that these mass produced razors aren't really a "commodity". that there can be variations between runs and that the only way you could keep track of that is either try every single razor Rockwell ever made, which is impractical or if the razors were stamped with a date or date code relating to the year and quarter of manufacture like the old Gillettes were. Certain codes would become recognized for certain characteristics and become sought after while others may be avoided.
So come on all you artisan razor makers, date stamp your work. Heck, brush makers too. You'll give the collector world one more data point to assist in their collecting.
Mark
So come on all you artisan razor makers, date stamp your work. Heck, brush makers too. You'll give the collector world one more data point to assist in their collecting.
Mark