My favorites blades currently are Gillette Stainless in the red pack, which tend to be harder to find (although still in production). I purchased a couple hundred from a supplier in eastern Europe, and everything looked fairly good until I opened a pack. Follow the photos below to see.
From the outside, everything looks almost identical. The text is slightly different but unless you're looking for it, you could easily miss it.
This is where I first noticed something was off. The real Gillette Stainless blades only have a wax wrapper, no paper wrapper. For a second I thought Gillette may have just changed their packaging, but it was a pretty terrible wrap job. The paper was uneven, and looked cheap.
I opened up the paper layer from the "fake" pack, and the wax paper was a really strange consistency. Thicker, yellow, and VERY waxy. Plus, the blade was already rusting.
I opened a few more just to make sure, and sure enough they were all wrapped in this really thick waxy paper. The paper itself was cut uneven and folded strangely.
Finally, the printing on the blade was of poorer quality compared to the genuine stainless blades I'm used to.
I went as far as to load one in my razor to see if the quality matched it's presentation. It was awful. It literally would not cut hair. I took the blade out of my razor and tried cutting the hair on my hand and no luck. I tried cutting paper.... it was a struggle. These were the most god awful blades.
I reached out to the supplier to inform him of his error-
His response was these were from the Czech Republic Gillette factory, not the St. Petersburg plant in Russia. I noticed that stamp on the box, but personally find it hard to believe that these would be receiving the stamp of approval from Gillette when they literally wont cut anything. Especially, with the same packaging and name as another blade that performs lightyears better. I'm really trying not to exaggerate their dullness, but they legitimately had a hard time cutting a piece of paper and absolutely would not cut even the fine hairs on my hand.
Can anyone else confirm that Gillette does have a blade manufacturing plant in the Czech Republic?
From the outside, everything looks almost identical. The text is slightly different but unless you're looking for it, you could easily miss it.
This is where I first noticed something was off. The real Gillette Stainless blades only have a wax wrapper, no paper wrapper. For a second I thought Gillette may have just changed their packaging, but it was a pretty terrible wrap job. The paper was uneven, and looked cheap.
I opened up the paper layer from the "fake" pack, and the wax paper was a really strange consistency. Thicker, yellow, and VERY waxy. Plus, the blade was already rusting.
I opened a few more just to make sure, and sure enough they were all wrapped in this really thick waxy paper. The paper itself was cut uneven and folded strangely.
Finally, the printing on the blade was of poorer quality compared to the genuine stainless blades I'm used to.
I went as far as to load one in my razor to see if the quality matched it's presentation. It was awful. It literally would not cut hair. I took the blade out of my razor and tried cutting the hair on my hand and no luck. I tried cutting paper.... it was a struggle. These were the most god awful blades.
I reached out to the supplier to inform him of his error-
His response was these were from the Czech Republic Gillette factory, not the St. Petersburg plant in Russia. I noticed that stamp on the box, but personally find it hard to believe that these would be receiving the stamp of approval from Gillette when they literally wont cut anything. Especially, with the same packaging and name as another blade that performs lightyears better. I'm really trying not to exaggerate their dullness, but they legitimately had a hard time cutting a piece of paper and absolutely would not cut even the fine hairs on my hand.
Can anyone else confirm that Gillette does have a blade manufacturing plant in the Czech Republic?
Gareth | VENDOR
TheShaveSupply.com
Free U.S. Shipping on orders over $45!
Enabling wet-shavers since 2012.
TheShaveSupply.com
Free U.S. Shipping on orders over $45!
Enabling wet-shavers since 2012.