The Safety Razor

razor
This is my safety razor. It’s from the 1940s. I use it to shave my legs.
I originally got the razor from an antique store. I properly cleaned it, of course. The reason they are called “safety razors” is because they were the next design up from a straight razor. They cut you less than the straight razor, thus the name.
I didn’t always use a safety razor. Until recently, I used a Gillette Mach 3. Before that, I used the disposables you get in plastic bags for $5. Then my husband got obsessed with old-fashioned shaving, and I learned that safety razors are a drastically cheaper option for shaving your legs.
Put it this way: A Mach 3 razor blade is about $13 for 4 blades. That is a staggering $3.25 per blade. If you get 6 shaves out of it, that $.54 per shave.
Compare that to the safety razor. We purchased 100 razor blades for $10, or $.10 per blade. If you use that blade 6 times, that’s less than two cents a shave.
That’s a savings of $3.15 per blade, or $.52 per shave.
Why is the price so different? It gets down to the proprietary nature of branded razors. Take Gillette–they have created a razor that takes specific blades so that no competitor can come along, make the same blade, and undercut them in price. If you buy a Gillette razor, you’re stuck with their blades.
By contrast, safety razors use common standard razor blades. Everyone makes them–you can get them at your corner drugstore–so they cost what a piece of sharp metal should cost, i.e. next to nothing.
I have also noticed that I get almost no razor rash or ingrown hairs with the safety razor. While the Mach 3 actually pulls the hair from under your skin to cut below the skin surface, the safety razor simply cuts along the hair follicle, thus making ingrown hairs unlikely. And because you’re dealing with one blade instead of three, you have to go slower with the safety razor, which is less stressful to the skin overall. This is especially useful for sensitive areas.
Of course nothing is perfect. It is supposed to be easier to cut yourself with a safety razor, although I haven’t experienced this. Also, it takes more time to shave, so it’s not great when you’re in a hurry. I keep some disposables around for when I’m in a rush and can’t be bothered to fuss with the safety razor.
Here’s a rundown of the safety razor:

Pros:

    MUCH cheaper
    Less stressful to the skin–no razor rash or ingrown hairs
    A closer, cleaner shave
    Sticking it to man, er, corporate razor companies


Cons:

    Easier to cut yourself
    Slower shaving time

Want to learn more? Here’s a whole forum of guys who can teach you about the safety razor.

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8 thoughts on “The Safety Razor”

  1. You are on the right track! I can see that there are more “Pros” than “Cons” there and that is true. You can lessen to hurt yourself using the Merkur safety razor if you know the right angle of the razor to your skin. The most important, and wildly overlooked, aspects of wet-shaving are: the blade angle and the pressure applied on the razor. The correct blade angle is 30 degrees onto the skin.

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  2. That is really cool. I kind of want one, though to be honest I just save my armpits most of the time, and only my legs in the summer.

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  3. I just wanted to say I love seeing someone else using the old fashioned safety razor! I was paying almost $15.00 for 4 replacement heads for my razor, and I finally got fed up. I bought a new version of the old fashioned safety razor with 24 blades. It was the best decision I ever made! I haven’t cut myself once since changing to this razor, I have no razor burn, and no ingrown hairs. It’s also a huge money saver.

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  4. The real trick is convincing your mother that that macho, industrial-looking razor in the bathroom does NOT mean there’s a man coming around.

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