Bart
Well-Known Member
Matt, you are spot on with answerring your own questions. If the skin is fine after the shave but starts protesting the next day, the problem is with the hairs having a hard time growing back out.Matt said:Lovely post, Bart, thank you - it made me grin to my monitor several timesAnd made me want to get such a fantastic shave, too.
Of course, there's always the Indian apart from the arrows. I'm far from stating there's nothing to my technique, [big]BUT[/big] I made some interesting observations this weekend (actually me and my Anna both did).
My regular shaving intervals are three to four days. Not that my stubble grows that slow. The day after is perfectly OK (I always shave in the evening) and I could do it on the second day, as far as the growth is concerned. Now here it comes. The day after the shave my skin feels great (great I mean it, cartridges hear this!), but another (2[sup]nd[/sup]) day it starts to itch, burn here and there, and depending on how things go, I can have a next shave no sooner than three or four days later, until the skin settles a bit. If I dare to shave on 2nd day, things will get hectic, and I will be nicked hard.
On sunday morning my Anna made some interesting observation that seem to confirm what I suspect. She loooked at my neck noticing it's still a bit sore (I had a really close 3-pass shave a few days earlier) and she realised there are quite many ingrowns here and there. I usually get hardly any nicks during my shaves - so my idea is that my stupid hair somehow have difficulties with growing back out, and this is the time I get most itching and discomfort. Some grow through, some apparently can't make it. I was thinking that maybe some peeling or some other crap like this might help?
Still it all indeed has nothing to do with comfortable ATG. I'm sure some learning from the masters would help. But this second day discomfort made me wonder a little?
Sorry for another rant on this subject.
best regards,
Matt
That has a lot to do with the curliness of your beard, and the fact that you shave close enough to get them underneath the skin. When you shave at a moment you've still several skin papilae with a whisker trapped inside, you'll slice these all open, leaving a bloody mess, irritation, etc...
The bad news is, that the problem is in your genes, and that cannot be fixed of course.
The good news is, that there are a few strategies that can each on their own lessen the likelihood of ingrowns and after enough finetuning the combined result can potentially make a huge difference.
Here goes:
1. don't shower before you shave. Steam softens the beard, which is good. But it also hydrates the hairs to the very root, which makes them swell and lift up in their skin pockets. Afterwards they retract a bit, which makes the shave even closer, but in your case flush with skin level is what we want, not below.
2. for a similar reason, don't prep too long. Find a good basic lathering soap, and get the whiskers softened with a good hot lather. In your particular case and against all common advice, I would start with lathering as short as possible: strop the razor, put everything ready, wash face briefly with a soap that cleans the beard but leave the natural oily skin barier intact (talk to your pharmacist), lather with a good shaving soap, and immediately go to work. You may need to adjust this to your situation, but I would start right there: with no soaking time.
3. find a way to close the skin pores after shaving. I hope you have an alum block. First rinse with cold water; next they alum block. Experiment with the aftershave. Many balms put so much moisture in the skin that it swells a bit. Again that may interfere with the hairs growing back out. You're probably better of with a simple splash. It may not make your skin appear like that of a baby, but then again, you are not a baby, are you?
4. How is cut can either promote or interfere with its chances to grow back out. If you stretch the skin in the direction of the hair growth, the whiskers will be pulled flat against your skin, and the resulting end cut will be bevelled, giving the hair a pointy, thin end that can easily curl and start growing in the wrong direction. If you stretch during ATG in front of the edge, hence pulling the whiskers up, the end cut will be closer to a 90° angle. That can make a significant difference for your hairs to grow back out.
Here are 2 old drawings of mine, that shows the idea of stretching from the right side.
5. Related to tip n°4, it also makes a difference in what direction you shave the hair (full ATG, or slightly more XTG), but guys with your problem have usually swirling beard growth, so this tip may not be very useful. Nevertheless, it is a good idea to experiment with the shaving direction a bit. Maybe you'll have to trade some closeness for an improvement of regrowth.
Kind regards,
Bart.
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