Mind you, now that I think about it , every takeoff is optional but every landing is mandatory. In my extensive flying experience, we start and finish with a bit of driving.
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Kind of my thoughts and why I never went to the Submarine service.Mind you, now that I think about it , every takeoff is optional but every landing is mandatory. In my extensive flying experience, we start and finish with a bit of driving.
Finding or changing the angle is technique. I think it depends on what you consider techniquegood point ... my counter would be: should have been obvious to change the angle .. I am not saying that technique isn't important at all, just that it was for me rather easy, and the razor made a lot more difference than the technique. If you have to focus a lot on learning technique, you have the wrong razor. Oh well ... I'm going to have to give up because I am vastly out-numbered here!
Interesting juxtaposition between your comment and your avatar.Kind of my thoughts and why I never went to the Submarine service.
Everything that goes up, must come down (though not necessarily at the same speed), but everything that goes down, does not have to come back up.
Yeah, I love that film, but I'm a surface guy through and through (or as bubble heads like to call us "targets")Interesting juxtaposition between your comment and your avatar.
I think what was discovered by the original poster is that many razors are more forgiving and don't require a disciplined technique as much as others. However, even the bloodbath razor you could probably learn to use deftly. The trial and error cost of mastering it is something most people don't have the patience for, understandable.
And the choir sang Amen! Can close this thread now. I’d love to see the OP post in this thread in about, oh, three years, and see what he’s learned. I’m ten years in now and I believe making my biggest strides right now. Our esteemed moderator @never-stop-learning screen name says it all.
The notion that you can shave with anything as long as you learn the technique seems ... iffy to me, at best ... it's mainly about the razor. I think this is what should be emphasized to newbies. It seems misleading to me to tell them to stick with on razor and work on the technique until they get it down.
IMHO, the notion you describe is different from the importance I attach to technique....
The notion that you can shave with anything as long as you learn the technique seems ... iffy to me, at best ... If you are experiencing a blood bath, you need to get a milder razor, not just keep using the offending razor until you learn how not to cut yourself (which could be never). With a milder razor, the newbie won't cut themselves ... regardless of technique considerations ... I think ...
It sounds to me like your technique is instinctive, & probably engraved in muscle memory. So much so, that you dont realise that you have technique at all!This might go under some existing thread - up to to the moderators!
I am bewildered by the emphasis on the importance of technique in DE shaving. Here are notes:
1. I've really only shaved with the following DE razors: Viking Blade the Chieftain, Merkur 34C, King C. Gillette, Baili 171, and Karve Brass SB (B and C plates). So this relative lack of experience might influence my opinion.
2. Among these, the VB Chieftain had by far the most blade exposure. Regardless of trying, I was never able to shave with it without a relative blood bath. Now, it is possible that some technique training would have helped ... I contend that the razor is just 'too much' for me.
3. Among the others, mostly mild to at most medium type razors, there was no issue whatsoever in terms of technique. I mean, the angle is intuitive and obvious based on the design of the head of the razor - you can figure it out immediately, more or less. Granted, there is going WTG and XTG and ATG .... that isn't much in terms of technique. Pressing harder or not as hard is just sort of intuitive too ... not much in terms of technique.
4. In terms of pre-shave and soap and all that: it doesn't matter much for me as long as I have some soap on my face when I shave. Hand soap works as well as anything else for me.
So I guess my point is this: the razor made all the difference for me, not the technique. The technique was 2%, the razor was 98%. The notion that you can shave with anything as long as you learn the technique seems ... iffy to me, at best ... it's mainly about the razor. I think this is what should be emphasized to newbies. It seems misleading to me to tell them to stick with on razor and work on the technique until they get it down. If you are experiencing a blood bath, you need to get a milder razor, not just keep using the offending razor until you learn how not to cut yourself (which could be never). With a milder razor, the newbie won't cut themselves ... regardless of technique considerations ... I think ... YMMV: I am just throwing this out there.
...I am bewildered by the emphasis on the importance of technique in DE shaving...