(03-06-2016, 07:23 PM)Tbone Wrote: Holy cow, Batman, that razor is 300 bucks! Beautiful to be sure, but way too pricey for me when Edwin Jagger razors are equally beautiful, shave great and cost around $35. For Gillette Fusion cartridge users, $300 is only about 48 cartridges worth. Given the pivoting head, it seems to me that cartridge razor users are the One Blade's primary target demographic. The One Blade would pay for itself within about year in that scenario. Is there more than one source for the blades, or is it Feather only?
It's designed around the Feather FHS single-edge blades, which are available at merchants other than OneBlade, such as Bullgoose or Connaught. Many folks on these forums have discovered that a GEM blade with its back spine removed provides an excellent shave in the OneBlade as well, though it doesn't fit quite perfectly in the razor.
Yep, no doubt $300 is a lot for a razor. I haven't seen anyone argue that everyone should get a OneBlade, that it's necessary for good shaving, or anything like that. They're obviously targeting a market willing to pay more for a deluxe, exceptionally well-crafted tool. Which I can say, it is. It'd be like spending a bunch on particularly excellent kitchen knives or a particularly well-made power drill, or whatnot. Not necessary, no, but for many, well worth the investment in the long-term.
According to OneBlade's own account of the design process, the pivoting head was the one good thing they found in cartridge razor design (it contributes "forgiveness"); I seriously doubt it's there just to appeal to cartridge users. The pivot in the OneBlade is rather firm, unlike a Mach 3 pivot for instance. I hardly notice it in a shave; it seems its contribution is subtle, though doubtless it is, along with the carefully considered blade exposure and angle, why the OneBlade manages to be so skin-friendly while remaining effective.
JustinHEMI,
Len and
Tbone like this post
David : DE shaving since Nov 2014. Nowadays giving in to the single-edge siren call.