Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 20 of 39

Thread: Who taught you?

  1. #1

    Default Who taught you?

    Those of you old enough to have started shaving using a DE razor: did your dad or some older male teach you the proper technique ( ala as taught on this forum ) or was it just a lather up once and shave type of thing? With me it was the latter. Had i been taught properly I doubt I would ever have switched to cartridges and electrics.

  2. #2

    Default

    Im not old enough to have started with a DE back in the day, but in general I learned on my own. I went ou and bought my own gillete at the time.

    My straight razor journey was quite similar. I never knew about stropping. I would buy a Dovo at the knife store and just shave with that. It was pretty painful, and for whatever reason my blades always rusted. It wasn't until SRP/B&B and the Shave Den did I start to learn the proper ways of straight shaving/honing/stropping
    Veteran of the Great Irisch Moos Campaign of 2008-9
    Proud member of the Great Eagle Group Buy of 2010
    I Survived the Great Migration 06/2011
    "Gentlemen, we will chase perfection, and we will chase it relentlessly, knowing all the while we can never attain it. But along the way, we shall catch excellence." Vince Lombardi

  3. #3
    Thread Starter

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by IsaacRN View Post
    Im not old enough to have started with a DE back in the day, but in general I learned on my own. I went ou and bought my own gillete at the time.

    My straight razor journey was quite similar. I never knew about stropping. I would buy a Dovo at the knife store and just shave with that. It was pretty painful, and for whatever reason my blades always rusted. It wasn't until SRP/B&B and the Shave Den did I start to learn the proper ways of straight shaving/honing/stropping
    I'm wondering if it was mostly the old time barbers who knew the proper technique with either a straight razor or a DE. I don't recall ever hearing any of the info I have learned from this forum.

    I admire the fact that you shave with a straight razor. If I were younger and my hands a bit more steady I'd try that. I'm afraid I'd get some serious injuries if I tried it now.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Location
    Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, USA
    Posts
    3,549
    Images
    4

    Default

    I grew up watching my Dad shave with a DE and a can of goo, so when it came time for my first shave, I already had a pretty good idea of what to do. I don't recall any specific lessons; it was more like "Take this razor, lather up, and get rid of that fuzz, kid!" After a couple of sessions with the resulting scrapes and cuts, I was finally getting a decent shave. After that, it was like riding a bike. 50+ years later, it still requires very little conscious thought on my part.
    Larry
    Vintage Human: Vintage Razors, Vintage Brushes, Vintage Fountain Pens

  5. #5
    Thread Starter

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Snargle View Post
    I grew up watching my Dad shave with a DE and a can of goo, so when it came time for my first shave, I already had a pretty good idea of what to do. I don't recall any specific lessons; it was more like "Take this razor, lather up, and get rid of that fuzz, kid!" After a couple of sessions with the resulting scrapes and cuts, I was finally getting a decent shave. After that, it was like riding a bike. 50+ years later, it still requires very little conscious thought on my part.
    That's basically the same way I was taught except that for lather we used the hand soap in the dish and a stiff (boar) brush. It was lather up and go after it. When the lather was gone you were finished. I, like you, got decent shaves, but nothing like the shaves I'm getting by following the advice on this forum.
    Uncle Dave

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
    Location
    Cedar Park, Texas, United States
    Posts
    415

    Default

    I was "taught" by watching my Dad. My first shaves were all with DE razors, until (I guess) late high school, when I switched to disposables and then cartridges. I basically had to relearn it all when I started again a few months ago.

    - Mark
    He Who Must Be O'Blade

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    In The Land of Milk n Honey
    Posts
    4,316

    Default

    My father was a workaholic...never had time to show me..I suffered many years with razor burn..4 years ago I discovered wet shaving just browsing for help..very happy since then :-)

  8. #8
    Thread Starter

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by markewallace View Post
    I was "taught" by watching my Dad. My first shaves were all with DE razors, until (I guess) late high school, when I switched to disposables and then cartridges. I basically had to relearn it all when I started again a few months ago.

    - Mark
    yeah, I too had to start over. You can't get away with sloppy technique with a DE.
    Uncle Dave

  9. #9

    Default

    this forum taught me a lot

  10. #10
    Thread Starter

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by fraue View Post
    this forum taught me a lot
    Same here. This is where I really learned to DE shave.
    Uncle Dave

  11. Default

    i think a lil bit from the TV on how to shave with a cart. then learn about wet shaving through Art of manliness. then dug deeper and found out about B&B then started DE shaving. kinda wish i knew someone in my family that uses this when i was starting out.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Rome, ITALY
    Posts
    11,116
    Images
    100

    Default

    I come from a family of wet shavers, my grandfather was a wet shaver, my father is a wet shaver and I have always been a wet shaver. I think I was born with a brush, soap and DE razor in my hands.
    Marco, Old School Wet Shaver

    Steward in the B&B Shave Clinic & Newbie Check-In forum

    My Wiki

    "Because a real Gentleman shaves, every morning" (My grandfather)



  13. #13
    Thread Starter

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Marco View Post
    I come from a family of wet shavers, my grandfather was a wet shaver, my father is a wet shaver and I have always been a wet shaver. I think I was born with a brush, soap and DE razor in my hands.
    You are lucky that you had someone to teach you how to shave with a non-cartridge razor. I had to learn by myself and I got 40 years of lousy shaves as a result!
    Uncle Dave

  14. Default

    Mantic taught me lol, my dad was too busy rushing to work to bother with a de anyway( electric in the car!).

  15. #15
    Thread Starter

    Default

    For a while I shaved with electrics. They irritated my skin something awful. I tried both the Norelco type and the foil types. Not happy and the cost of replacement blades is not good on electrics either.

    Sadly, I too learned proper technique from watching mantic and geofatboy on YouTube. My dad was just too busy/self-absorbed to fool with teaching me.
    Uncle Dave

  16. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by uncledavedougherty View Post
    Those of you old enough to have started shaving using a DE razor: did your dad or some older male teach you the proper technique ( ala as taught on this forum ) or was it just a lather up once and shave type of thing? With me it was the latter. Had i been taught properly I doubt I would ever have switched to cartridges and electrics.

    Taught myself.

  17. #17
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Windsor, Ontario,Canada
    Posts
    13,889

    Default

    I missed the boat on the DE shave. My dad taught me how to shave with his Trac II/Atra. Many many years later my Dad showed me the DE shave with his 1972 Black Handled SS.

  18. #18
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Location
    Upstate NY between here and Great Barrington
    Posts
    935

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Snargle View Post
    I grew up watching my Dad shave with a DE and a can of goo, so when it came time for my first shave, I already had a pretty good idea of what to do. I don't recall any specific lessons; it was more like "Take this razor, lather up, and get rid of that fuzz, kid!" After a couple of sessions with the resulting scrapes and cuts, I was finally getting a decent shave. After that, it was like riding a bike. 50+ years later, it still requires very little conscious thought on my part.
    +1

    My experience precisely.
    Bill, BOTOC

  19. #19
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    Los Angeles, CA
    Posts
    1,977

    Default

    Manic
    David

  20. #20
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
    Location
    New Orleans
    Posts
    4,267

    Default

    I learned from a TV commercial.
    Banned for Life from "Over There"... TWICE!

 

 

Similar Threads

  1. Who taught you to shave?
    By Tom-Dave in forum General Shaving Discussion
    Replies: 101
    Last Post: 01-19-2012, 02:29 AM
  2. Cold water taught me a TON about my R41
    By trick420 in forum General Shaving Discussion
    Replies: 21
    Last Post: 10-27-2011, 08:43 PM
  3. who taught you to shave ?
    By Aevum in forum Shave Clinic & Newbie Check-In
    Replies: 125
    Last Post: 03-31-2011, 10:10 PM
  4. I wish someone had taught me this years ago
    By robertw in forum Shave Clinic & Newbie Check-In
    Replies: 16
    Last Post: 02-28-2008, 09:01 PM
  5. Pulling your Skin Taught
    By TraderJoe in forum General Shaving Discussion
    Replies: 20
    Last Post: 07-25-2006, 02:24 PM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •