(This post was last modified: 11-03-2016, 06:42 PM by grim.)
(11-03-2016, 03:48 PM)BadDad Wrote: If our grandfathers had even half the choices that we have for shaving gear, than I posit they would have sat around discussing their choices.
Since in reality the choices available were extremely limited by comparison, I posit that their conversations were proportionally limited.
I remember conversations from the 60s. I know what people talked about and rest assured, it was not shaving. No one cared one bit.
The Amazing Mets? Sure. Joe Namath and the first AFL Super Bowl win? Sure. Shaving? Seriously? There is a reason safety razors and soaps went the way of the dodo bird and canned shaving cream dominated the market along with disposable and cartridges. For the most part, it has a HATED task.
It was a boring, mundane, hated task by the vast majority of men, or at least those I was met. NO ONE talked about it and there were plenty of aftershaves, blades, and razors. It's not like "vintage" razors were just found last year. They have existed for a hundred years and likely viewed as "old junk" in a draw.
I can't possibly imagine any conversation about "aftershaves" other than Christmas time to buy a gift once per year. It just wasn't done. And it has nothing to do with choice. No one cared.
There was no glorification, no "hobby. It was just "work" or a "task" you had to do to be presentable.