-Dovo Bismarck
-Epsilon Poor Man's Chubby
-Arko
-Stirling Orange Chill
This month, as much as work will allow, I am going to use one straight per week. This week's is the 6/8 Bismarck. The biggest goal I am hoping to achieve with it this week is to not drop it, ding the bevel and have to send it out to be repaired.

I really like the feel of this razor in the hand. The way the tang is shaped, and the thumb notch make it feel very comfortable and stable. I really will be working mainly on angle this month, and trying to optimize it. The Artist Club style razors may be way less forgiving about flaying your face, but they seem way more forgiving about angle. It didn't take long to see that the straights are a little more finicky.
Feeling full of team spirit, I grated up a stick of Arko and went to town with it. Arko was one of, if not the first soap I bought when I started visiting forums. See, I was still a frugal minimalist type then, and the ridiculously low price was pretty appealing. I love the soap. I enjoy the scent, it is easy to lather, slick, but I am a dry skin type of guy, and Arko doesn't help that at all.
So I hadn't used it in at least a year, and I figured since I was going to lecture about how to lather it, I had better step up. I do miss an Arko shave. I had a bunch a good slick lather and I love the old school soap smell. Something about it reminds me of my gramma's laundry room. I am going to work this in every once in a while in the warmer months when my skin can take it.
@Fly2High - this is what I mean about shiny gloop. In these pictures it still needs a touch of water, but I always test and finish it on my face, not in the bowl when it isn't a soap I am really familiar with. I lather up, flick my brush under the dribbling faucet if it needs more. That way I don't mess up the whole bowl with a misstep. Again, some people might not like it this soft; this is just how I do it, and it is slick as baby snot.
![[IMG]](proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fuploads.tapatalk-cdn.com%2F20170402%2F07a26149ebb0f1402e3ed4c5c07a303a.jpg&hash=7e6e2b2a61b6cb455ecad32ca30254d6)
Click to expand...