it can be done qoing down then up using a bit of angle on the blade and a gillette slide. clean shaven in 2 passes
Instead of moving the SR on your skin in a direction perpendicular to the edge, you move it at an angle, say at about 30° off the perpendicular. It sounds dangerous and it can be if you don't have the skill to do it safely. It has about the same danger level as doing it with a "safety" razor from where the term "Gillette slide" came from.What is the Gillette slide?
Thanks. I think such a move goes by other names too. "Scything motion" comes to mind.Instead of moving the SR on your skin in a direction perpendicular to the edge, you move it at an angle, say at about 30° off the perpendicular. It sounds dangerous and it can be if you don't have the skill to do it safely. It has about the same danger level as doing it with a "safety" razor from where the term "Gillette slide" came from.
I now use the Gillette slide with all my SR shaves when shaving my neck. The whisker growth on my neck is basically horizontal from the throat outwards. My Gillet slide has the SR edge positioned horizontally but moving at about 60° from the horizontal towards my throat.
I'm working SLOWLY to develop this technique. It seems most useful in ATG swipes. My facial ATG is a stroke from sideburn towards goatee. As I discovered, ATG is much more easily accomplished once the WTG stroke is completed. (Obvious to you all, I imagine!)
So, the SR is moved from ear to goatee while also moving downwards. It's a slicing motion, I suppose. As long as the razor is moving laterally, there's less risk in the downwards motion parallel with the blade. As @rbscebu said, it takes skill. It feels mentally counterintuitive; but I take it nice and slow and lead with the heel. As @rbscebu also says (the exact opposite), I NEVER do it on my neck! It's going to take me time to develop the feel to move the blade laterally on my neck. Half of me says I'll never do it. The other half encourages me that one day....
Personally, I make a distinction between a scything stroke and a sliding stroke.I think such a move goes by other names too. "Scything motion" comes to mind.