Share your Shave of the Day for Friday!
January 9th, 2026
- Brush: Dogwood Handcrafts - “Santa Noir” w/ 28mm Badger
- Razor: Geneva Cutlery Co. (Genco) Straight Razor (2)
- Lather: Williams - Mug Soap - Soap
- Post Shave: Barrister and Mann - Petrichor - Aftershave
- Post Shave: Nivea - Sensitive - Balm
- Fragrance: Fanzine Saponifications - Caravaggio - EdP
Nice shave. Very close, but a few small weepers – no big deal. I find this razor to be nimble and I quite like that aspect of it. It’s on the narrower side – I should print out one of those straight razor measuring charts.
gcgallant@sub.wetshaving.social 3 days ago
January 9, 2026
2 passes. Face lather. Excellent shave.
This Le Petit Français razor has over a 22 degree bevel angle. And it is a new razor! It was sent to me to have a new edge put on it. I chose to use a Jnat to create the edge with that Jnat softness, and then I tried a new technique while shaving to deal with the wide angle. This was very successful for me, and I very much hope that it works for others.
I picked Monarch because its fragrance is modeled on a French market. I thought that was fitting to go with the French razor. Surprisingly great shave today!
Shave video
TriplePlaid@lemmy.zip 3 days ago
Nice video! I was hoping you could provide some more context as to the bevel angle and what advantages/drawbacks there are with having such a large angle.
I know very little about straight razor shaving but I am getting interested and may have to try some day… Still need to finish learning the DE razor first I think.
gcgallant@sub.wetshaving.social 2 days ago
Ok, here’s (probably) more than you want to know 🙂. An edge is made up of two (bevel) surfaces that come together (intersect) to form a line. This is almost always drawn as two lines that come together at a point (the apex) showing two sides of a triangle.
In cutting, you achieve more precision by narrowing that triangle; think about the difference between an axe and a scalpel.
We call the angle between the two sides the bevel angle. On a straight razor that angle is determined by the width of the spine and the height of the blade.
Generally speaking, smaller angles are better for shaving. Most straight razors that I’ve measured have a bevel angle between 15 and 18 degrees. The challenge I had with this razor, which had a bevel angle of 22 degrees, was, “how can I get it to shave well?”.
Wet shaving turns out to be a terrific hobby and there’s a whole world of safety razors (DE and SE), soaps, splashes, etc. to explore. Straight razors are another rabbit hole to go down within the hobby.