I’ve pretty much always wet shaved, I tried a Braun electric razor for a while but didn’t think it shaved close enough. My go to was Gillette G2 and shaving gel but that all changed around 15 years ago when I was working overseas in a remote location and decided to take shaving more seriously as a hobby to fill some time!
Plunging into the world of the straight razor was a bit of an international affair. I bought a German Dovo razor and leather strop from Solingen and a Shavemac silver tip badger brush. I sent the razor to the US to get it professionally honed by a ‘honemeister’. Shaving cream came for Trumper’s in London after I visited the shop and left with various flavoured tubs. I practiced for ages to get proficient using the straight edge but it took me way too long even as a hobby 😊
Thankfully I didn’t get too immersed in the world of sharpening stones, well purchasing them anyway. Apart from the various grit sizes needed to get the perfect edge on a straight razor you enter a parallel universe. You could get a simple man-made stone for a tenner up to several thousand quid for a Japanese stone used to sharpen swords. The stone world is bewildering so I avoided.
Moving onto safety razors was a good move and my weapon of choice is the Muhle R89 which I have a couple of. The one bought 15 years ago differs form the one I bought a couple of years back, the newer one has a much more aggressive cut and my understanding is that the razor comb has been modified in some way. The move to the safety razor meant looking for the best blades to suit my skin and it has taken a lot of trial and error over the years but my go to blade is the Gillette super 7 which I get by the card from a mate in Kuala Lumpur.
I tried out loads of different shaving creams, I have tried loads from eastern Europe, India, UK, SE Asia but my go to at the moment is the Arko brand from Turkey.
Don’t forget to buy an Osma block to rub on any shaving nicks to stop the bleed it beats forgetting to take the loo paper off your face😊