A couple of years ago I wrote a little piece about why – when you came right down to it – AI could ruin articles about shaving. Or at least the articles you’ll find in glossy magazines, which – as we all know – are seldom worth reading.
More to todays point, that blogpost included an AI generated drawing of a man shaving.
Today I tried generating a similar image. And the new image is… way much better.
The result of over four years of careful study and experimentation. Made after secret formula, and with a superlatively keen edge. So hard it will cut glass. Keener and more durable. And no, I’m not referring to the ad copy of the latest multi-blade plastic horror to be peddled by Gillette. I’m referring to the ad copy from a 1908 advertisement for their “new process” blade.
Well, shaving brush with disposable knot, to be precise.
Like so many others – Edward L Corbet, John T Cooney, Marguerite Faučon, and Aron Braunstein & Angel Rattiner to mention just a few – inventors, Gustav Koch searched for a sanitary, hygienic, and disposable shaving brush. If it worked well for making lather, it was a bonus. If it dodn’t need a cup, that would be one less unsanitary item to worry about.
Simplicity is often seen as a goal. And sometimes it can be taken too far, as with Samuel C Yeaton Jr’s simple sheet metal razor patented in 1910. Which is not to say that he described it in simple terms.
To quote from the patent text:
My invention relates particularly to safety razors and comprises a holder for retaining the razor blade adapted for use with a blade having two cutting edges, oppositely disposed, and is constructed to permit the repeated use of the blade as often as it is resharpened. The retaining frame comprises two sides, upon whose outer edges are formed protective combs having the ends folded over forming lips. The four corners of the blade are held in spring pressed engagement between these lips. This always insures accurate and correct positions of the cutting edges upon their respective combs, which is not altered (owing to the spring pressed engagement of the lips) when the razor is reduced in transverse dimension after it has been resharpened.
In short, it’s a springy sheet metal piece that has been bent into the shape of a razor. The blade stops presses against the blade, and holds it in place. There is no top cap, as we know it from a regular three piece razor.
It is worth noting that the razor was clearly meant for blades that was meant to be sharpened and stropped. The ‘normal’ double edged blade – as known in 1910 – would likely not be suitable for use in Samuel’s razor. A modern, thin double edged blade would be too flexible to be usable. But with a blade more suitable for the razor, there is no reason why Samuel’s simple sheet metal razor wouldn’t work as intended.
What makes Samuel’s simple sheet metal razor stand out is that pressure is applied to the edges, as opposed to the flat sides of the blade.
The patent is, naturally, long expired. It won’t work with a modern, flexible double edged blade, but the design should easily be modified to take a stiffer single edged blade like a GEM. The question is why?