About two months ago, I was in a hurry to get to work, but needed to shave. It so happened that I had shaved late the day before, and had a less-than-24h growth of stubble on my face, so I thought I'd just do an ATG pass and hope that would suffice.
I used a GEM SE razor and face-lathered some Arko and the shave was brilliant. It wasn't quite a 'single-pass' shave, because I had to do touch-ups as well. Still, it was pretty nice even though I skipped the WTG and XTG passes. It was very quick, of course.
The success I had with that led me to use the same technique almost every weekday for the last couple of months. I've used DE's, SE's and straights and they've all been pretty great (with a few caveats - see below). Here are some of my thoughts on this process.
1) Face-lathering a good soap seems to be essential. I shower the night before, so there's no soaking of the whiskers involved. Face-lathering a good soap seems to work best in these situations.
2) Synthetic brushes give better results. This is because they need no soaking. A badger brush would work as well I guess, but boar needs to be soaked, and that takes up time. Also, boar brushes eat more lather.
3) For my face, straights and SE razors work better. I think this has to do with the stiffness of the blades. DE blades are always dicey on my face, and more so on an ATG-only shave.
4) The shaves are pretty much as good as a regular 3+ pass shave.
___________
I think this may have long-term benefits for my skin as I'm not scraping a blade over it 3-times on each shave, though I don't have enough data to justify that feeling yet.
Regardless, 1-pass shaving seems to work for me.
When I skip a day of shaving on the weekend, a 1-pass shave is not an option. I've tried it, and I don't get good results on a 1-pass shave in that case. Stubble-reduction is important with longer growth.
I don't know what experiences other guys have had with this. I'm sure some of you have tried it.
Now, this being a hobby, I'm sure that people would prefer to take their time and enjoy their collection of razors, blades, soaps/creams and brushes over a longer shave, but I can't help but wonder if doing more passes than is necessary is actually more likely to lead to skin irritation, etc.
I used a GEM SE razor and face-lathered some Arko and the shave was brilliant. It wasn't quite a 'single-pass' shave, because I had to do touch-ups as well. Still, it was pretty nice even though I skipped the WTG and XTG passes. It was very quick, of course.
The success I had with that led me to use the same technique almost every weekday for the last couple of months. I've used DE's, SE's and straights and they've all been pretty great (with a few caveats - see below). Here are some of my thoughts on this process.
1) Face-lathering a good soap seems to be essential. I shower the night before, so there's no soaking of the whiskers involved. Face-lathering a good soap seems to work best in these situations.
2) Synthetic brushes give better results. This is because they need no soaking. A badger brush would work as well I guess, but boar needs to be soaked, and that takes up time. Also, boar brushes eat more lather.
3) For my face, straights and SE razors work better. I think this has to do with the stiffness of the blades. DE blades are always dicey on my face, and more so on an ATG-only shave.
4) The shaves are pretty much as good as a regular 3+ pass shave.
___________
I think this may have long-term benefits for my skin as I'm not scraping a blade over it 3-times on each shave, though I don't have enough data to justify that feeling yet.
Regardless, 1-pass shaving seems to work for me.
When I skip a day of shaving on the weekend, a 1-pass shave is not an option. I've tried it, and I don't get good results on a 1-pass shave in that case. Stubble-reduction is important with longer growth.
I don't know what experiences other guys have had with this. I'm sure some of you have tried it.
Now, this being a hobby, I'm sure that people would prefer to take their time and enjoy their collection of razors, blades, soaps/creams and brushes over a longer shave, but I can't help but wonder if doing more passes than is necessary is actually more likely to lead to skin irritation, etc.
- Yohann