Day 1 of 5; 30-Day JUNE Rule
Starting over with a NEW razor today after five consecutive days with the Case
'Red Imp.' Today's razor is dramatically different from the Red Imp in
appearance, size, feel, age and
origin.
The next razor is a late-19th century blade made in Sheffield, England by
Joseph Rodgers & Sons,
'Cutlers to Their Majesties' mounted to a custom set of zebrawood scales.
As you can see in the first photo below, the
Red Imp has the more familiar
modern full-hollow blade shape with a straight-line edge, right-angle nose and double-shoulder transition from the tang. The Rodgers, on the other hand, has a dramatically denser, heavier blade (quarter-hollow) with a thick shoulder and heavy, angular spine. The smiling
scimitar-like edge terminates into a thick shoulder. The thick tang has a large, curved thumb notch, which in use comes in very handy in maneuvering the blade. The blade is widest (6/8") in the center, and narrowest (4/8") at the heel. The tip is just over 5/8" width.
To say this blade feels
different on the face from the Imp is an understatement. While shaving with the Rodgers, one needs to be aware of the smiling edge as well as the pointed tip, which juts out menacingly on each pass. The thicker spine
(second photo) is helpful in maintaining a proper cutting angle as I find that a
'swooping' stroke is more efficient with this blade than the traditional straight line descending or ascending stroke.
This Rodgers is one of the more challenging razors to use. I find myself repeating areas I'm shaving as I get accustomed to how I draw the blade (swoop) across the face. The end result IS a very smooth shave, but I'm getting some irritation on those areas where I've repeated the strokes perhaps too many times.
This will be an interesting five days as I get re-acclimated to this unique straight razor.
TOP: Case Red Imp (mid-20th century); BOTTOM: Joseph Rodgers & Sons (late 19th century)
Thick, angular spine...
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