Twinjector?

Found these while I was looking for pictures for Tuesday’s post:

Twinjectors is something I’ve never heard about… but they must clearly have been a thing, and as far as I can tell they came out at about the same time as first twin blade cartridges – but they don’t seem to have been on the market for very long. Even my favorite shvaing forum – the Shave Nook – only have a single post even mentioning the Twinjector; a want-to-buy post from 2013.

A few more pictures I found while digging for more information:

As often happens, Gillette was not alone in making injectors for twin blades. Both Persona and Schick made them as well in the same time frame, and they seem to have sunk into the murky depths of time without leaving much behind as well.
The Personna Injectore II:

The Schick Injector Twin:

I suspect the various twin blade injectors were plagued by the same fault as most multiblade carts; clogging between the blades…

All in all an interesting little oddity that I’m happy I stumbled across in my meandering trek across the internet.

German WW2 military shave kit

This is, according to the sources online, an original German Wehrmacht standard issue shavekit. Goes one better than the US Gillette Khaki kit from WW1 by including brush and soap, but  the round mirror seems less useful than a rectangular one.

More military shaving photos

Five o’clock shadow

five o’clock shad·ow
noun
unpunctuated: five oclock shadow; noun: five o’clock shadow; plural noun: five o’clock shadows
    a dark appearance on a man’s chin and face caused by the slight growth of beard that has occurred since he shaved in the morning.

Old patent – a Swedish safety razor

Be it known that I, MAGNUS H. JOHANSON, a subject of the King of Sweden, residing at Rochester, in the county of Monroe and State of New York, have invented new and useful improvements in Safety-Razors and Safety-Razor Blades.

Okay.. so what did the Swede Magnus Johanson actually come up with back in 1918? Short version; a razor where the top cap is held in place by two spring-loaded latches – and said latches also work to lift the blade against the top cap when the razor is locked. From the somewhat unclear description it appears that, while the design in the drawing utilised a flat spring, Magnus saw the possibility of using the actual razor blade as the spring for the latches.

His improvement on the blade is less of an improvement and more of an added step (and cost) in production:

The blade 13 is of generally semi-circular contour, and rests snugly upon the support 10, as shown. lt’s inner surface is formed on the true arc of` a circle, and blade 13 is provided at each end with a notch 15, said notch being preferably disposed centrally.

Part of what made the Gillette successful is that the blade is cheap to make and can be spat out in huge numbers by simple machines, and this is mostly because of the shape. Adding a curve to a tempered blade is difficult, and tempering after curving would require some pretty specialised equipment.

That said, the patent it as far as I can see long expired, so if someone has a machine shop and plenty of spare time it should be possible to adapt the basic idea to regular, flat DE blades.

Note: Remember to press “Publish”, not just “Save” 🙁

Stahly Live Blade Wind-up Vibrating Safety Razor

Made from the 1940’s up into the 1970’s. The vibration was supposed to minimize snagging and give a smoother shave, but it would scare the willies out of me.

Neat folding razor

Found this when I was roaming online:

From where I found it, it’s marked with:

PATENT
O.K. Safety Razor with Comb

…and that is pretty much all I know. It’s neat and I would love to own one.

Traveling shave den

From left to right:LEA shave stick, Gillette Old Type from the khaki set, Omega #50014 travel brush, travel sized Krampert’s Finest Bay Rum Aftershave, WSP Matterhorn Beard Oil, and a travel sized stick of alum.

“Keep innovating” they said…

…more like fiddling and breaking a well working, near perfect design I say – Keep It Simple Stupid and all that.

The 1904; Considered one of the highlights of early safety razors, originals still usable, still shaving great, spawned an untold number of copies, a myriad of different blades available.
The 1965 Techmatic; Considered one of the worst razors ever, can’t get replacement blades today, only lasting claim to fame is that it went to space.
The 2014 FlexBall; Apparently modern man has lost the ability to move his wrist, single source of (expensive) blades, moving parts will wear out, requires a battery, no significant improvement on other carts.

Old school shaving

How about a 4000 year old bronze razor?