I'm getting older and slowing down.....slowing down with my 'serial obsessions' (as my wife calls them). Shaving is/was one of those serial obsessions.
From what I've read on the various forums I've belonged to over the years, I started into traditional wetshaving for reasons shared by a majority of members - overpriced multi-blade cartridges, sub-par shaves, ingrown hairs, etc. I wanted to save money on shaving . We all know how that played out.
After several years of various AD's (I managed to avoid AS-AD), I had spent several thousand dollars on shaving stuff. I had a custom Zowada straight that remains my most expensive shaving purchase. I spent hundreds of dollars on a Somerset Manchurian Chubby 3, and I got in on the Cobra Classic craze before they had any real demand. I tried more razors, brushes, and blades than I can remember.
The shaves did improve steadily for a while --- and then they stopped improving.
I'm a slow learner, or rather I tried to avoid for as long as possible the lesson that was becoming obvious. I reluctantly learned that by-and-large the tools were not really what determined the quality of the shave....rather it was me and my technique (or lack thereof) that was the prime determining factor in whether the shave was going to be good or not.
I know now that with proper technique, prep and an understanding of my tools an Arko stick, a GEM MM with a GEM blade, an Omega Boar and a Pinaud AS will give me a great shaving experience. Every time.
That's not to say that I don't still have a large collection of stuff or that I use the above combo all, or even most of the time. I like variation and I still have several dozen DE's and SE's and straights. I don't know how many soaps/creams I have. I've cut my brushes down to about a dozen.
What has changed is that while i used to obsess about each aspect of the shave, now I just shave. If I feel like using something that smells like marzipan, I use P160, if I want menthol I use Proraso, or PC soaps or whatever. I know they'll each perform well - regardless of the brush I use, or the razor, or the blade.
I have realized that price of the item is not going to determine how much I'll like it. I've seen a plethora of new shaving implements reach the market over the last few years and that's exciting, but I usually have little desire to try them out because I know that they all will eventually shave me the same. At some point, no razor can take off more stubble without taking off some skin. I can get there without any real effort with pretty much any razor I currently have. Some get there sooner, some take more passes, but they all take close to the same amount of time since each pass is pretty short.
No! I'm not saying that YOU shouldn't try out new things or get excited about the latest razor made of Titanium, or whatever. Everyone should have fun with this hobby in their own way.
Basically, I find that I've reached a level of contentment now. The drive to buy more is pretty much gone. Every now and then I get curious about something and I may or may not try it.
If I buy a Wolfman razor it will be because I have determined that I really want one - not because I expect it to shave me better than my Merkur Progress. I may like some aspect of the Wolfman better than the Merkur, but the shave will be equally close when I'm done, and I will enjoy the shave equally. My skill will even out the experience. If I have a sub-par shave, I know it's because I did not build a good lather, not because the soap sucked. Or maybe it was because I tried to squeeze one shave too many from a blade, not because the razor sucked. I may look at a razor or a brush and say, 'Wow! This is a work of art!', but as a tool a work of art will probably shave me as well as a plain-Jane Gillette.
So I shave, and enjoy my shaves. I read the forums and enjoy seeing what's new. I don't spend my time wanting stuff and that's only improved my satisfaction with this hobby.
And that's what it's all about (not the hokey-pokey).
From what I've read on the various forums I've belonged to over the years, I started into traditional wetshaving for reasons shared by a majority of members - overpriced multi-blade cartridges, sub-par shaves, ingrown hairs, etc. I wanted to save money on shaving . We all know how that played out.
After several years of various AD's (I managed to avoid AS-AD), I had spent several thousand dollars on shaving stuff. I had a custom Zowada straight that remains my most expensive shaving purchase. I spent hundreds of dollars on a Somerset Manchurian Chubby 3, and I got in on the Cobra Classic craze before they had any real demand. I tried more razors, brushes, and blades than I can remember.
The shaves did improve steadily for a while --- and then they stopped improving.
I'm a slow learner, or rather I tried to avoid for as long as possible the lesson that was becoming obvious. I reluctantly learned that by-and-large the tools were not really what determined the quality of the shave....rather it was me and my technique (or lack thereof) that was the prime determining factor in whether the shave was going to be good or not.
I know now that with proper technique, prep and an understanding of my tools an Arko stick, a GEM MM with a GEM blade, an Omega Boar and a Pinaud AS will give me a great shaving experience. Every time.
That's not to say that I don't still have a large collection of stuff or that I use the above combo all, or even most of the time. I like variation and I still have several dozen DE's and SE's and straights. I don't know how many soaps/creams I have. I've cut my brushes down to about a dozen.
What has changed is that while i used to obsess about each aspect of the shave, now I just shave. If I feel like using something that smells like marzipan, I use P160, if I want menthol I use Proraso, or PC soaps or whatever. I know they'll each perform well - regardless of the brush I use, or the razor, or the blade.
I have realized that price of the item is not going to determine how much I'll like it. I've seen a plethora of new shaving implements reach the market over the last few years and that's exciting, but I usually have little desire to try them out because I know that they all will eventually shave me the same. At some point, no razor can take off more stubble without taking off some skin. I can get there without any real effort with pretty much any razor I currently have. Some get there sooner, some take more passes, but they all take close to the same amount of time since each pass is pretty short.
No! I'm not saying that YOU shouldn't try out new things or get excited about the latest razor made of Titanium, or whatever. Everyone should have fun with this hobby in their own way.
Basically, I find that I've reached a level of contentment now. The drive to buy more is pretty much gone. Every now and then I get curious about something and I may or may not try it.
If I buy a Wolfman razor it will be because I have determined that I really want one - not because I expect it to shave me better than my Merkur Progress. I may like some aspect of the Wolfman better than the Merkur, but the shave will be equally close when I'm done, and I will enjoy the shave equally. My skill will even out the experience. If I have a sub-par shave, I know it's because I did not build a good lather, not because the soap sucked. Or maybe it was because I tried to squeeze one shave too many from a blade, not because the razor sucked. I may look at a razor or a brush and say, 'Wow! This is a work of art!', but as a tool a work of art will probably shave me as well as a plain-Jane Gillette.
So I shave, and enjoy my shaves. I read the forums and enjoy seeing what's new. I don't spend my time wanting stuff and that's only improved my satisfaction with this hobby.
And that's what it's all about (not the hokey-pokey).
- Yohann