The original safety razor with disposable blades goes back to nearly the beginning of the previous century. Those double-edge blades were economical, effective and, generally safe. Unfortunately, you can't find them any more. This was perhaps the first business model in which the money was in the consumable element (the blades), not in the product (the razor) itself, which manufacturers could afford to give away. But razor manufacturers weren't satisfied with selling those simple blades. Schick patented a sleeker, more maneuverable "injector" blade. Wilkinson Sword created the "bonded blade." Gillette, the industry leader, created the double-bladed razor, one with two blades that claimed to provide a closer shave. In 1975, "Saturday Night Live" parodied the multi-blade razor with a fake commercial touting a triple-blade razor.
Now the joke's on us. Gillette has a five-bladed razor. Schick has a four-bladed razor. There are even razors that have a battery in the handle so that the blades vibrate as you shave. The result of all this innovation (or consumer gullibility) has been ever-increasing costs of shaving. I've sought ways to fight back by buying house-brand or off-brand razors and blades. I'm steadfastly refusing to buy the latest razor with a battery in the handle. But any replacement blade you buy, even for an obsolete razor like the one in the back of the vanity drawer, will cost you around $3 a shot. The state-of-the-art replacement blades run close to $3.50 each, even if you buy the larger packages.
So I've resorted to buying disposable razors. It makes no sense that an entire razor with a fixed blade or blades should cost less than a disposable replacement blade for a higher-quality, long-lasting razor. But it does. Disposable razors can be had for less than $2 each. The trick is to make them last as long as higher-quality replacement blades. Fifteen days is my standard. Good-quality, brand-name replacement blades (the $3 to $3.50 kind) can easily last two weeks, so I can change blades twice a month. Making disposable razors last that long is a challenge. It's obvious that the blades the manufacturers put into disposable razors are not on a par with their first-quality replacement blades, no matter how many blades might be in the cartridge.
I read recently that old-timey straight razors are making a comeback, largely for financial reasons. A good straight razor might cost $200, but it will last a lifetime, the article said. Disposable blades will cost more than that over a lifetime. But I'm not sure I want to apply a blade like that to my throat. As for electric razors, I've tried a couple but have never been satisfied with the closeness or the comfort.
Today, I've made a cheap disposable razor last 15 days. But my face and skin have paid the price. I may have to surrender and cough up the $3-plus for first-quality replacement blades, but I'm not going to use a razor with a battery in the handle.
I wonder how long I'll have to wait for a six-blade razor.
2 comments:
My disposable lasts >4 months. I shake it out so water will not sit on the blade. Clark Howard talked of making disposables last longer and a listener called in and said dip it in alcohol and then shake the moisture off:
(reference)
http://clarkhoward.com/liveweb/shownotes/2007/08/31/12606/
and
http://clarkhoward.com/liveweb/shownotes/2008/08/26/13926/
So if you really want to get frugal read through Clark Howard's tips and tighten up. You have been spending way to much money on your shaving habits.
I have been shaving in the shower, when I shower, for 20+ years (no mirror and no sink clean-up) and use plain ole dial soap to lather up with and using these cheap disposables that last me for a long time to save my money over the marketing craziness of those stupid razor manufacturers. Now if I could only get my girls to understand they do not need a new razor for their legs after 2-3 uses I would be a millionaire. :)
I'll admit to buying a slightly higher-priced disposable blade (over the little plastic throwaways) but I probably change the blade every 4-6 months. It seems to work fine for that length of time so no need to throw out a good blade.
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