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Surely at some price point people will just move back to old fashioned safety razors.

Mine costs me a few cents per blade and gives a very close shave.

Yeah I do that too. Even then I shave as rarely as I can bare to, both to save blades and time. The old safety razors take some getting use to and practise but I consider that part of the fun.
I got pretty obsessed with safety razors and wetshaving a little while ago. The blade is unquestionably less forgiving than your standard 3-5 blade Shave System™, and you have to unlearn some sloppy technique that pivoting-head razors promote. I.e. you have to pay attention to the angle at which you're placing the blade against your skin.

But I pretty quickly got to a point where cuts were even less common than they were before I started using the safety razor, and I think my experience is pretty much the norm for anyone who sticks with it for 5-10 shaves. It takes a bit longer, but it's a better shave with less irritation, and the ritual of it is a lot of fun.

And some of the shaving creams that you apply with a brush (I'm thinking specifically of Taylor of Old Bond Street's rose-scented one) smell absolutely incredible.

I am very obsessed with safety razors. Been hooked on it for about 2 years now and haven't gone back: 1) save a ton of money 2) feel like I have that "best shave of my life" at least once a week. 3) local product I use is much better for the face.

It is definitely an adjustment, I'd venture to say it took me about 3 months of experimenting (shaving 3-4 times a week) before I was getting extremely close shaves. The best analogy I've heard is that using a safety razor is like driving a manual sports car. It's a lost art of being a man.

I started with a basic $20 razor and common mekur blades... But about a year ago I upgraded to Markur Futur, and more recently switched to Feather (japanese) blades. If you haven't tried the Feather blades, definitely encourage you to do so.

http://www.truefittandhill.com/catImages/large_MerkurFuturSa...

http://www.fendrihan.com/images/feather_10.jpg

I personally like the Derby blades I picked up off of Amazon, they still get just as close as anything else I've used, but they somehow feel 'softer' than all the others. Perhaps more forgiving is a better phrase. What's so great about the Feathers?
Feathers are made by a Japanese surgical tool company. They are considered by many to be the sharpest blade you can purchase.

That said, practice with Merkur or Derby's before you graduate to feathers.

I bought the Derbys on Amazon as well (100 pack for 15 bucks! Two year supply, basically, instead of a stretched 2 month supply for 30 dollar Gillettes) but I have to say I prefer the feeling of the Merkurs. Still, the price is right for the Derbys, though I do want to try feathers in the future.

I switched to wetshaving with badger hair and a safety razor because of irritation from cartridge razors. A few months later I was in a mad rush and used my cartridge razor with a new cartridge -- it felt like it was ripping my face off. I hadn't realized just how bad the cartridges were till then.
This sort of reminds me of the HP printer cartridges (cheap printer, expensive cartridges). I saw a TV interview with a HP executive who was asked to justify why the cartridges were so expensive. He said that it was because the most sophisticated technology was in the cartridge.

Of course this business model is quite immoral in a world where disposable, non-recycleable things are known to be unsustainable.

I use the Gilette Fusion and have a heavy beard, but one cartridge lasts me two weeks. Here's how: I shake the water off my razor and then use a blow dryer to completely dry the blades after each shave. Supposedly it's not the cutting of hair that really dulls the blades, but rather the corrosion that occurs on the wet edges after you put it up.
That's a big surprise to me, the same as some thing the article says.

For more than thirty years, I've used disposable Blue II (dirty cheap, they last one or two months each), cream (not sure if that's the word in English... 2€, it lasts a whole year, no kidding) and a brush (natural weasel hair, they last an average of twenty years). I make the whole thing in three minutes, no cuts, no pain, very close.

I've tried electrical shavers, gel, more than two razors and all sorts of novelties, but nothing was a real improvement. I think they can insult us, cheaper customers because we really couldn't care less. While they keep making the cheap stuff, they can bark all they want :-)

The software equivalent of this model is probably Freemium. You give away part of the package for free, but then you charge a "subscription" for the rest. Razors are the free, Blades are the "subscription."
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I think I read somewhere that Mach 3 refills are the most shoplifted item ever. Gillette's marketing is a truly incredible machine. I finally gave up on their extortionate cost about 5 years ago and bought myself a Merkur Futur. Blades cost £3 for 10, and cut as close as you want but require a little more of a delicate touch. So I still keep a Mach 3 on standby for my hung-over mornings.
I guess I'm one of the few dupes here :). I recently switched to using Fusion blades (not the power ones where you also have to worry about the battery) because I forgot to bring my shaving kit when traveling.

I have to say I was pretty pleased by how quickly and consistent the shave was relative to Mach 3. Being accident prone and generally impatient in the morning, it's resulted in no blood loss so far (it's been about 2 months since I started using them). I've used 2 blades in this time which to me is worth the cost relative to the time I save and the quality of the shave I get.

Razor and Blade?!? They're freaks!