(This post was last modified: 08-23-2022, 04:34 AM by inspirado.)
Hi all,
I am picking up my DE razors after, frankly, a few hiatuses I’ve the past couple of decades. I’m now committed to trying to just get better at it. I’ve been experimenting a ton the last few months and have made considerable progress.
One place I still have difficulty with, though, is the very base of my neck. I had a breakthrough when I got my Stirling DE - finally I was able to feel the blade exposure and know that I was making good contact. This provided the best shave I’ve ever had. It also produced the biggest gashes...
However, I have also noticed that the pesky areas grow with a very acute angle to my neck. This means they almost lay flat against my neck when they grow. Having a technical background I would say that the azimuth is the direction they grow as measured by a compass laying flat against my face. The angle, however, is how much the growing hair points away from my face (straight up like a tree or laying down like a fallen log). My stirling seems to allow me to really get close and catch those low-angle hairs.
I rarely see this angle discussed, only what I call azimuth. Does anybody else encounter this issue? It kind of kills any mild or negative exposure razors for me with my current technique.
Regards,
inspirado
I am picking up my DE razors after, frankly, a few hiatuses I’ve the past couple of decades. I’m now committed to trying to just get better at it. I’ve been experimenting a ton the last few months and have made considerable progress.
One place I still have difficulty with, though, is the very base of my neck. I had a breakthrough when I got my Stirling DE - finally I was able to feel the blade exposure and know that I was making good contact. This provided the best shave I’ve ever had. It also produced the biggest gashes...
However, I have also noticed that the pesky areas grow with a very acute angle to my neck. This means they almost lay flat against my neck when they grow. Having a technical background I would say that the azimuth is the direction they grow as measured by a compass laying flat against my face. The angle, however, is how much the growing hair points away from my face (straight up like a tree or laying down like a fallen log). My stirling seems to allow me to really get close and catch those low-angle hairs.
I rarely see this angle discussed, only what I call azimuth. Does anybody else encounter this issue? It kind of kills any mild or negative exposure razors for me with my current technique.
Regards,
inspirado