Comment on Monday SOTD Thread - November 25th, 2024 (#533)

djundjila@sub.wetshaving.social ⁨3⁩ ⁨weeks⁩ ago

GEM Days 9a/14: Ever-Ready Streamline – Pretty Regression – Mon 25 Nov 2024

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This is shave 17 of my run through all 14 generations of GEM-style razors, and I have reached the Ever-Ready Streamline, or when things started going south IMO.

The Jewel/Streamline/Ambassador

A little bit of context. We’re in 1949, the height of shaving technology is the Micromatic Flying Wing, and the 1912 is a about 4 decades old at this point. It is still being produced. Engineers of the American Safety Razor Company have since improved upon it by decoupling the blade alignment and clamping with the 1914 and 1924, both of which went out of production since. The engineers further improved upon it by developing the Micromatic twist-to-open mechanism that keeps your fingers nicely distanced from any spring-loaded top caps and sharp edges, but still the 1912 is being produced. It seems like ASR wants to produce fancy high-tech razors like the beautiful Flying Wing, they want to shake he legacy and limitations of the 1912 design, but something (likely economic pressure from the Gillette competition) keeps them in the low cost-low tech business of the 1912.

In this context, the Streamline/Jewel/Ambassador enters the scene. It’s shiny, its hefty, it looks solid, and… It’s a fancy 1912. A full regression to their first design. See for yourself †: closed and open

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This is just a cast version of the 1912 and could have been produced as is in 1912. ASR just fully gave up on being a technology brand for this one and went for 100% nostalgia. This is the second generation of the Streamline, but this time it sticks and it marks the end of the Micromatic era. Starting with this second gen Streamline, all future razors by ASR will be less technologically advanced than the Micromatics (or mimic it with cheap plastic parts).

† There is also a rare early first generation 1936 Streamline, but the historical context is the same (substitute high tech MMOC for high tech Flying Wing).

The shave

Luckily, the 1912 is a great shaver, and the Streamline has inherited that. It’s disappointing that this thing was made after the Micromatics, but as an as earlier GEM ad says, “So What? It’s the shave that counts!”

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I always enjoy the rose cream, and the combo with Two Kings and Gravity works well.

The timeline

  1. 1906-1953: GEM 1912/Star Cadet/Junior/Damaskeene
  2. 1914-1927: 1914
  3. 1924-1933: 1924 Shovelhead
  4. 1930-1932: Micromatic Open Comb Gen 1 (Bumpless baseplate)
  5. 1932-1941: Micromatic Open Comb Gen 2 (double-edge Micromatic GEM blades)
  6. 1940-1943: Micromatic Clog-Pruf
  7. 1945-1946: Micromatic Clog-Pruf Peerless
  8. 1947-1950: Micromatic Flying Wing/Bullet Tip, with guiding eye until 1948, with plastic knob in the last year
  9. 1949-1953: GEM Jewel/Streamline/Ambassador (The beginning of the end IMHO)We are here
  10. 1950: New GEM Feather Weight, renamed to “Slim-V Flat Top” in 1953, British version sold as “Natural Angle” by Ever-Ready
  11. 1955-1958: GEM V-Slim “Heavy Flat Top” (G-Bar, shiny chrome), New V Natural Angle Heavy Flat Top (E-Bar, less shiny nickel)
  12. 1958-1965: Push Button
  13. 1965-1973: Contour
  14. 1973-1979: Contour II (The last GEM razor)

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