I recently took delivery of some ye olde Pal, Hollow Ground, single edge blades.
I am mightily impressed with the sharpness and smoothness of these old beauties. I don't know exactly when they were made but I'm guessing in the fifties sometime. They come in a cardboard box of ten with a little man in red pyjamas and his face covered in shaving cream on the left corner of the box.
While I have had one dud and one blade that was OK the others I've used have been great. Then again they are about sixty-ish years old, so I can't complain about the odd fizzer. I can get four good, clean shaves out of one blade with my skin feeling terrific afterwards. In my opinion they are better than the blades available today.
The blade is also blued like it's modern counterpart and the spine is nice and solid with PAL Hollow Ground on one side and PAL Made in USA on the other. I reckon that adds a bit of class and substance to the blade.
Maybe if all us SE razor users rise up, grab our pitch forks and flaming torches and storm the Corporate HQ of the American Safety Razor Corp. we could convince them to start making them again.
I am mightily impressed with the sharpness and smoothness of these old beauties. I don't know exactly when they were made but I'm guessing in the fifties sometime. They come in a cardboard box of ten with a little man in red pyjamas and his face covered in shaving cream on the left corner of the box.
While I have had one dud and one blade that was OK the others I've used have been great. Then again they are about sixty-ish years old, so I can't complain about the odd fizzer. I can get four good, clean shaves out of one blade with my skin feeling terrific afterwards. In my opinion they are better than the blades available today.
The blade is also blued like it's modern counterpart and the spine is nice and solid with PAL Hollow Ground on one side and PAL Made in USA on the other. I reckon that adds a bit of class and substance to the blade.
Maybe if all us SE razor users rise up, grab our pitch forks and flaming torches and storm the Corporate HQ of the American Safety Razor Corp. we could convince them to start making them again.