Years ago when Feather was the hot blade some guys who found them too much of a good thing would 'cork' them. Run the edge through a cork to take them down a notch (I guess) so the blade would be a bit gentler.
While I did then, and do now, find some blades shave more comfortably on the second go round than the first, I never tried the corking, figuring the blade will get dull enough with use, without me accelerating the process.
Then I began to see some of the blades coming out of Russia with 'do not wipe blade' printed on the wrapper. I read that they have a coating which accounts for the sharpness/smoothness, and wiping would take that coating off.
How much more would corking take whatever coating or polish is on them ? I've also read, maybe from Leisure Guy ... not sure, that all of these 'sharp' double edge blades owe their fine edge to the coatings applied in manufacturing, and removing the coating will do more harm than good.
Of course I could just try it myself, but I'm curious is there is a general consensus among members of DFS who have been more experimental than I have.
While I did then, and do now, find some blades shave more comfortably on the second go round than the first, I never tried the corking, figuring the blade will get dull enough with use, without me accelerating the process.
Then I began to see some of the blades coming out of Russia with 'do not wipe blade' printed on the wrapper. I read that they have a coating which accounts for the sharpness/smoothness, and wiping would take that coating off.
How much more would corking take whatever coating or polish is on them ? I've also read, maybe from Leisure Guy ... not sure, that all of these 'sharp' double edge blades owe their fine edge to the coatings applied in manufacturing, and removing the coating will do more harm than good.
Of course I could just try it myself, but I'm curious is there is a general consensus among members of DFS who have been more experimental than I have.