(This post was last modified: 10-21-2017, 11:28 AM by Mickey Oberman.)
Schick Instamatic Band Razors.
These razors used a strip of stainless steel long enough for either 5, 6 or 10 single edge blades. It was tightly wound into a replaceable plastic cartridge. When the blade had to be replaced merely moving a little lever brought a new edge into position. My first blade on a roll of six blades gave me an unbelievable 43 BBS shaves of mostly 3 passes and a touch up before I moved to blade two on the strip.
The notebook is my record of its shaves on the first blade.
It was produced as far as I can determine from the 1960's to the 1970's. Manufacturers made money not on selling razors but on the hundreds of blades sold for each razor.
The Band had a very low blade appetite.
The picture also shows two blister packed models and the back of one card as well as a still packaged 10 blade cartridge.
IMG [Image: IMGP7512.jpg]
Mickey
These razors used a strip of stainless steel long enough for either 5, 6 or 10 single edge blades. It was tightly wound into a replaceable plastic cartridge. When the blade had to be replaced merely moving a little lever brought a new edge into position. My first blade on a roll of six blades gave me an unbelievable 43 BBS shaves of mostly 3 passes and a touch up before I moved to blade two on the strip.
The notebook is my record of its shaves on the first blade.
It was produced as far as I can determine from the 1960's to the 1970's. Manufacturers made money not on selling razors but on the hundreds of blades sold for each razor.
The Band had a very low blade appetite.
The picture also shows two blister packed models and the back of one card as well as a still packaged 10 blade cartridge.
IMG [Image: IMGP7512.jpg]
Mickey