Pre-shave: Dr Bronner’s Liquid Orange Soap
Lather: Orange Essential Oil Shave Croap
Brush: Semogue TSN 2012 LE mixed badger-boar
Razor: Cadet 11 TTO OC with a Flying Eagle
Post-shave: Cool water rinse, alum, and Body Shop maca root face protector
Shave of the day 20th June
Pre-shave: Dr Bronner’s Liquid Peppermint Soap
Lather: Prorazo Eucalyptus & Menthol Cream
Brush: Vie Long 13051M pure horse
Razor: Cadet 11 TTO OC with a Flying Eagle
Post-shave: Cool water rinse, alum, and Krampert’s Finest Bay Rum
Shaving brushes and… anthrax?
Unknown to many these days, it used to be common to have your shaving brush made out of horsehair. Horsehair for a brush makes sense on many levels, not the least of which is the fact that they are animal friendly – the hair is harvested as part of the normal grooming of the horse.
However, the horsehair brush fell out of favour around the Great War, since some suppliers were less than good about sterilizing their products. A bit of searching online brings to light some documents from the time:
Anthrax from Shaving Brushes (July 12, 1918)
Anthrax and the Sterilization of Shaving Brushes (May 9, 1919)
An Investigation of the Shaving-Brush Industry, with Special Reference to Anthrax (May 9, 1919)
Isolation of Anthrax Bacillus from a shaving Mug (November 1, 1922)
Shave of the day 18th June
Pre-shave: Dr Bronner’s Liquid Teatree Soap
Lather: Arko Cool Mint
Brush: Turkish No6
Razor: Cadet 11 TTO OC with a fresh Flying Eagle
Post-shave: Cool water rinse, alum, and Krampert’s Finest Bay Rum
A BBS shave…
Shave of the day 16th June
Pre-shave: N/A
Lather: N/A
Brush: N/A
Razors: Phillips AT890
Post-shave: Krampert’s Finest Bay Rum
Got a sunburn this weekend, so opted for a ‘worse’ shave that wouldn’t involve dragging a blade over my tender skin
Shave of the day 13th June
Pre-shave: Dr Bronner’s Liquid Teatree
Lather: Rise brushless cream
Brush: N/A
Razors: Parker 22R with a Feather blade
Post-shave: Cool water rinse, alum and BodyShop maca root face protector
Wikipedia on shaving
Shaving soap, shaving brush, and shaving.
Shave on the day 11th June
Pre-shave: Dr Bronner’s Liquid Peppermint
Lather: Mama Bear’s Awakening
Brush: Vie Long 14033 mixed horse/boar
Razors: Parker 22R with a Feather blade
Post-shave: Cool water rinse, alum and Kramperst’s Finest Prototype Menthol
Shaving thoughts
From the free (as in both beer and speech) ebook “The Perfect Gentleman” by Ralph Bergengren, downloaded from Project Gutenberg (which still is an awesome site for free books);
The world of shavers is divided into three classes: the ordinary shaver, the safety shaver, and the extraordinary-safety shaver, who buys each safety razor as soon as it is invented and is never so happy as when about to try a new one. To a shaver of this class, cost is immaterial. A safety-razor for a cent, with twenty gold-monogramed blades and a guaranty of expert surgical attendance if he cuts himself, would stir his active interest neither more nor less than a safety-razor for a hundred dollars, with one Cannotbedull blade and an iron-clad agreement to pay the makers an indemnity if he found it unsatisfactory. He buys them secretly, lest his wife justly accuse him of extravagance, and practises cunning in getting rid of them afterward; for to a conscientious gentleman throwing away a razor is a responsible matter. It is hard to think of any place where a razor-blade, indestructible and horribly sharp as it is,—for all purposes except shaving,—can be thrown away without some worry over possible consequences. A baby may find and swallow it; the ashman sever an artery; dropping it overboard at sea is impracticable, to say nothing of the danger to some innocent fish. Mailing it anonymously to the makers, although it is expensive, is a solution, or at least shifts the responsibility. Perhaps the safest course is to put the blades with the odds and ends you have been going to throw away to-morrow ever since you can remember; for there, while you live, nobody will ever disturb them. Once, indeed, I—but this is getting too personal: I was simply about to say thatit is possible to purchase a twenty-five cent safety-razor, returnable if unsatisfactory, and find the place of sale vanished before you can get back to it. But between inventions in safety-razors, the extraordinary-safety shaver is likely to revert to first principles and the naked steel of his ancestors.
I’m not saying he was right – but 95 years later we still have many people who will jump on the latest razor bandwagon… just to return to their old razors, disappointed. May I suggest they pick up a DE razor and some good soap instead?
