I never bought a vintage razor and know nothing about them. I was required to be out of the house with my son for 2 hours for a wedding shower, so I passed a big flea Market and decided to stop. I walked for about 2 hours, and I did not see any vintage shaving items. I walked by a big booth with all kinds of cast iron cooking items and some glass cases that had all kinds of knives, and the cases and booth were a mess, I saw one cheap straight razor in the pile of knives, so I ask the guy if he knew of anyone here carried any vintage shaving razors. He pulled out an old metal lunchbox filled with what looked like rusty old razors. The only thing I knew to check was if the doors opened, and for the adjustable's I made sure the bars were not bent and the adjustments worked. I found 8 razors that worked perfectly, but were a mess. They looked incredibly dirty and thought the insides were rusty. Since this was the first vintage razors I have bought, I had no idea how to figure out the date codes. When I asked the price for all 8 he said $150, and I decided to get them. I brought them home, cleaned and sanitized after watching YouTube video on how to clean a vintage razor and watching videos from Ken Surfs, Tobin Fetters and Matt at razor emporium. I was amazed how much gunk came off. So, after getting home and researching I discovered I picked up a 1959 adjustable Gillette fat boy, 3 adjustable Gillette slim’s from 1964-1968, 3 adjustable super slims with black handle, one with the long handle, I think from 1966-1972, and a Gillette flare tip with a black handle from the 1970's. $150 for all 8 a good deal? I have no idea, but I cleaned, sanitized, polished, and oiled the razors and wow they came back to life. All of what I thought was rust damaged came off and they look amazing. The polishing cloth removed all the water stains, and the razors almost look new. The paint in the numbers are gone but I will see if I can fix that. I did not take before pictures but attached are pictures of the finished products. They all shave fantastic, because I tested them, and only one door sticks a bit but still shaves fantastic. I feel it was a lucky find and caught the guy in a good mood on the Saturday. On Sunday he was not in such a good mood. Not sure if $150 is a good deal, but it's amazing the craftsmanship of something that cost between $1.50-$1.95 when it was new 60 years ago, and still works incredible today. I found an old tin in my shop to display the razors in, and this is a fun and functional addition to the shave den. Sorry about the big pictures.
Dan
Dan