I think the only conclusion you can draw is that your technique with the Feather is not there yet. My experience with straight razors is that they shave equally as close or even closer than a DE razor. There was an interesting debate on another forum a few years ago when one poster was of the opinion that any razor with a safety bar (open or closed) could not shave as close as a straight. I countered that if you are taking off hairs at skin level then both guarded and unguarded blades will shave equally as close. He then came back with a theory of the ‘squeegee’ effect of a straight i.e. having the blade directly against the skin makes whiskers pop out from below skin level which are then cut closer than a guarded blade can get. His point was that the safety bar also acts as a ‘squeegee’ but the blade gap means it doesn’t cut quite as close.Day 32 - Feather Artist Club DX with Schick Proline.... sort of...
My wife cut my hair last night. She always leaves the sideburns, and I sort those out with a DE. I have a mole near one sideburn, so I didn't fancy trying to work that out with the wider Feather AC blade, so I used a DE.
So 1 uneventful pass done with the DX, just WTG, and when I switched to the DE for the sideburns, I got tempted to try a pass of DE for comparison.
In fairness, the DE in question was a Wolfman WR2 1.55mm SB loaded with a Shark SS blade. Probably my most efficient razor, with my smoothest blade. Well I did 1 pass with the Wolfman, mostly ATG because I've missed being able to go ATG with the Feather AC. After that there was no point. The Wolfman really shaved me far closer in that one pass than the Feather has ever done in 3 passes.
Food for thought.
One thing's for sure, using a straight of any type really makes you think about it. With no guard, and no pressure on a face that is curved, if you shave your skin without stretching, you're only putting a tiny bit of blade in contact with the skin. Increase the pressure to get the flatter skin, and you're going to hurt yourself. Thus the quest for flat skin via stretching becomes more important. I guess this was a job the safety bar was taking care of for me, without me having to think about it. It also makes me think that riding the bar (steep) must always beat riding the cap (shallow), surely.I think the only conclusion you can draw is that your technique with the Feather is not there yet. My experience with straight razors is that they shave equally as close or even closer than a DE razor. There was an interesting debate on another forum a few years ago when one poster was of the opinion that any razor with a safety bar (open or closed) could not shave as close as a straight. I countered that if you are taking off hairs at skin level then both guarded and unguarded blades will shave equally as close. He then came back with a theory of the ‘squeegee’ effect of a straight i.e. having the blade directly against the skin makes whiskers pop out from below skin level which are then cut closer than a guarded blade can get. His point was that the safety bar also acts as a ‘squeegee’ but the blade gap means it doesn’t cut quite as close.
I think there is something in this in that a good shave with either type of razor will feel just as close, but the straight will last longer before stubble is noticeable.
Do straight shavers ever use the "bullfrog" technique? I'm thinking it might be a way to get those pesky ATG passes done on my neck, but nervous that the slack skin would be really easy to slice.Once you get more confidence in having a blade in direct contact you will begin to relax and enjoy the shave more. Although, like you, I stretch to avoid the issues you describe, I find that when I’m touching up e.g. ATG on my neck and cheeks, I stop stretching and let the razor move up the skin with no harm. That’s when you get the really close effect.
That’s a new one on me so I can’t advise you. What I would say is don’t over-think it - after all there was a time when a straight was the only tool available and there must have been lots of men with heavy growth and/or irregular growth patterns who managed OK. Remember as well that a true straight razor is more forgiving than a manufactured blade - but it’s all to do with the angle. Get it right and you’re fine, but get it too open and you will cut yourself.Do straight shavers ever use the "bullfrog" technique? I'm thinking it might be a way to get those pesky ATG passes done on my neck, but nervous that the slack skin would be really easy to slice.
There's definitely some logic to that. In the past, I've had times when there were several DEs loaded up and ready to go on my sink, and I've done different passes with different razors, with good results. At the moment, I'm so far down the learning curve, though, that I need to keep working on the AC system.For a long time I aimed at str8 only shaves and then I decided there is nothing wrong with 2-razor-shaves. I get by far the best shaves with a str8 followed by a ATG pass, sometimes with a DE, sometimes with a SE. I then tried going back to all str8, all DE and all SE shaves and nothing gives me the wonderful shaves of 2-razor-shaves. IME str8 razors get 95% of the job done with very smooth and pleasurable results, better than any other method. Going after the remaining 5% with the str8 means higher risk of cuts and irritation, so I go after the remaining 5% with an ATG pass with a safety razor. Works for me.
Thanks, that's useful feedback. So it's like riding a bike. You never forget!It's all good fun is right.
Having recently jumped back into FAC shaves I've found there's not much re-learning to be had. I'd done maybe a year or more of DE only and straight back into close, comfortable shaves with no cuts when I was prompted by this thread to consider the shavettes again, with all this new found time on my hands.
Be promiscuous in your razor selection but don't, like me, stop reaching for the FAC altogether. Unless you want, in a year or more's time, to use the FAC again and wonder after another lovely and close shave why you've put it off so long, like I did.
Re-discovery was rewarding. Thank you for the thread.