Many blades in the workshop this season. Here’s a forging that was ground into a western style double hollow. Upcoming on this blade – red leather handle wrappings. Should be a fine kamisori.
Many blades in the workshop this season. Here’s a forging that was ground into a western style double hollow. Upcoming on this blade – red leather handle wrappings. Should be a fine kamisori.
Hope you enjoy the new site.
It’s currently in a testing mode. I’ll be adding content and updating as the weeks go on.
My first straight razor came to me when I was in college. It was a yellow handled German hollow ground blade I found in my Grandpa’s garage. I quickly found that the ritual and closeness of a straight shave was incomparable. Thereon, I kept collecting and restoring antique blades as a hobby, and years later, started blacksmithing and grinding my own line of razors.
My work takes my mind and puts it into my hands. How I feel at the time is a direct result of what I craft. There’s a great deal of respect involved. Often I’m restoring someone’s great grandfather’s blade, or putting the finishing touches on a razor that will be around for 100 years after I’m gone. It’s humbling and rewarding.
With a straight it’s all about ritual. Shaving becomes an event, fun, and exciting. You take your time, enjoy the scent of the leather strop as you true your blade, and you learn that shaving cream can smell botanical and natural. It kick-starts a healthy perspective to start your day. There’s great satisfaction in wiping away hair with keen steel you’ve maintained for years. With a bit of practice, using a straight becomes second nature – the shaves get quick and smooth. Eventually, you get good enough that you can take a whole beard clean off in one swipe.
Everything. My customers are among the best people I’ve encountered. We share life stories and I often catch up with them like an old time barber. I would have never thought that taking the time for a close straight shave could have such a positive impact on my life.
This blade has been through quite a journey. Several designs, multiple forgings. Here I am pulling it from the oil quench.
At the forge today, with temperatures at -1.3 according to the nearby university.
When I put the hot steel to the anvil, the cold surface draws the heat away almost instantly. So I warm the anvil between hammerings, using a large hot piece of steel. This keeps the metal moving.