-40%

New Luxury Wooden Shaving Soap Bowl / Mug with Lid Cover For Men's Brush HARYALI

$ 9.47

Availability: 183 in stock
  • Condition: New
  • Handle Material: Wood
  • Knot Size: 20 mm
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Color: Brown
  • Bowl Diameter: 10 cm
  • Type: Shaving Soap Bowl
  • Modified Item: No
  • Set Includes: Shaving Soap Bowl
  • Model: nwdbwl-2016
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Brush Material: Badger Hair
  • Material: Wood
  • Bowl Material: Wood
  • Brand: HARYALI LONDON
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Unknown
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • MPN: Does Not Apply
  • Custom Bundle: No

    Description

    Brand New Classic Shave 100% Wooden Bowl with Lid
    This is just a Great
    Collectible
    Piece
    Hand Crafted by Professional Workmanship
    Hand made Polished Waterproof Finish
    Great Art, Nicely Curved, Design and Shaped
    Curved sides for Firm Grip while usage
    Perfect for Gifts or for Vanity and Shaving Collectors
    Overall size (Approx.):   3.85" X 2"
    Interior Dimension:   3.25"
    Outer Dimension:   Approx 4"
    Buy with confidence. Please contact us before leaving feedback. We are not doing business to get -ve feedback. We are selling at very competitive price.
    Shipping
    Orders usually shipped the next business day. Please contact us for availability on rush or time sensitive orders.
    Shipping charges are clearly indicated, and are not refundable.
    FOR ALL APO / FPO ORDERS there will be additional .95 towards shipping charges
    We ship USPS. Free US Ground Shipping on Orders over 0 (excluding: AK, HI, PR & territories);
    US delivery address time in transit estimates:
    First Class (4-7 business days),
    Priority Mail (2-3 business days)
    Express Mail (1-2 days - No Sunday or Holiday deliveries)
    Time in transit are estimates only, from time of shipment.
    Returns
    If for any reason you are not completely satisfied with your purchase, please contact us as soon as possible. You may return orders
    unused, in new condition and in the original packaging
    , within 7 days of receipt for a refund of the purchase price.
    For health reasons we are unable to accept returns on personal care products such as razors, shaving brushes, strops and manicure implements unless defective.
    Please note:
    Shipping charges are not refundable unless the return is the result of our error. USPS Ground or Priority Mail shipping and handling charges will be applied to return orders that received free ground shipping.
    Important!
    Please " ask seller a question " for a return authorization. Unauthorized returns will be refused and returned at your expense.
    We reserve the right to refuse any order. Certain items we sell are not available for export.
    A Cutthroat Business
    (wordings taken from an article)
    Men take a lot of ribbing from the media for their newfound interest in grooming. When writing their metrosexual theme stories § every newspaper's gotta have one! § journalists invariably call me, sometimes chuckling but most often perplexed that men (read: "real" men) should concern themselves with anything that doesn't involve strange noises and motor oil.
    Also invariably, this question arises: "Does the trend come from the gay community, or has feminism finally neutered the modern male?" To which I reply, "Have you ever tried to shave yourself with a straight razor? Many of my customers do it, every morning. Shave yourself with a straight razor and then come back to tell me about the feminization of men."
    That part never seems to make it into their stories.
    Manly? Yes!
    Absolutely nothing is more masculine than a shave tool that can take your head clean off. Straight razors practically drip testosterone from their unprotected blades. These bad boys are the reason safety razors exist. They are unassailable icons of dangerous living.
    At times called the open razor or cutthroat, straight razors are making something of a comeback as men rediscover the nearly lost art of the traditional shave. And don't kid yourself: straight-razor shaving is an art - one that takes practice, the rock of eye, and a steady hand. Rush the job and you'll be reapplying your Adam's apple with Krazy Glue.
    Practice Makes Perfect
    Learning to shave with a straight razor involves very much the same process. Create safe zones and expand your territory. Start by trimming your sideburns on the first day of practice. Just the sideburns. That's it. Shave the rest of your face with your favorite safety razor.
    Each consecutive morning, expand your safe zones to include more of the face. In this way, you'll quickly develop a technique with the blade that's least likely to draw blood.
    Preparation
    Lather is everything when shaving with a straight razor. The cardinal rule is to never let the lather dry or become too thin, or your razor won't work. Allow the lather two or three full minutes before shaving to soften the hairs.
    During that time, sharpen your razor with a leather strop as this is a new razor so you just have to remove the petroleum jelly with a napkin from the razor and you are ready to go. Stropping isn't exactly rocket surgery but does involve a marginal level of skill. To strop the blade, fix one end of the strop to some immovable object like a bedpost or mother-in-law, hold the other end of the strop in whichever hand you don't use for writing, and run the blade horizontally in rapid back-and-forth strokes along the leather surface.
    The blade should always be turned away from you when pulling it toward your body. Flip the blade over to face you when stropping in the opposite direction. Strop-flip-strop-flip-strop. Get it?
    Once stropping is complete, apply another layer of emulsified cream and you're ready to rock and roll.
    The Straight Razor Shave
    Hold the razor securely by placing the pads of your index and second fingers on the shank, your thumb under the shank and against the shoulder, the handle raised vertically between your middle and ring fingers, and your ring and pinky fingers resting inside the crescent-shaped tang.
    Using the fingers of your free hand, stretch the skin until it is as taut as possible. Hold the razor at a 30 degree angle to the surface of your skin and shave your first even stroke in the direction of hair growth. Apply lather over the freshly shaven area and shave a second even stroke against the direction of hair growth. Only two strokes are necessary. You can skip the second stroke, if it seems too tricky to attempt.
    The "angle of the dangle" is your key to error-free shaving. Fewer than 30 degrees and you'll rip the hair out by its root. More than 30 degrees and you'll very likely slice yourself to ribbons. The only areas for which this rule doesn't apply are the chin and upper lip. For these two trouble spots only, angle the back of the blade a little closer to your skin and proceed with caution.
    Care and Maintenance
    Stainless Steel straight razors doesn't require a lot TLC. But the extra attention is worth it. A properly maintained blade will last the rest of your life and probably outlive your kids.
    At the end of your shave, thoroughly clean the razor by running it under water. Dab it dry (never rub) with a cloth. Give the blade one final stropping and lightly grease it with mineral oil. Allow the blade to dry for 10 minutes, then dab away the excess oil and store your razor in a dry, dark, well-ventilated spot away from the reach of children. Use a cotton swab soaked in rubbing alcohol to remove the mineral oil before your next shave.
    Should you (horror of horrors) discover rust on your blade, remove it at once with one of those white 3M scrub pads or a handful of "0000 Grade" (extremely fine) steel wool. Dip a cotton swab in rubbing alcohol and clean the entire surface of the blade, then grease with mineral oil and store.
    Never use metal or silver polishes to clean your razor. Never immerse or expose your razor to bleach, ammonia, or harsh detergents. Never leave your razor near an open flame or heat source. Never (and this one's a double-never) drop or otherwise damage your blade. A severely damaged blade should be discarded.
    If your razor becomes nicked or so dull it actually rivals my last job, whip out your sharpening stone and give the blade a good hone. You'll only need to do this once a year, perhaps twice. Strop after honing and you're done.
    Why Own a Straight Razor?
    Right now, you're probably asking yourself if all this extra love and attention is worth the price of admission. The answer to that question depends on how much of a fetish you've developed for the ultimate in close shaves.
    Other grooming sites will try to convince you that multi-blade disposables are the pinnacle of technological perfection. Whatever. Disposables deliver a great shave and they look a little like ray guns, which I suppose is cool. But nothing, absolutely nothing, shaves as closely as a straight razor.