
Originally Posted by
hoglahoo
I guess just to clarify, my point is that perfect technique will be different for different beards. The perfect technique is the combination of a perfect selection from among a widely varied perfect set of perfect tactical and strategic shaving maneuvers and implimentations and a perfect application of that perfect selection for that beard, but it is not the sum total of that perfect set
In other words, the perfect shaver has adjusted his or her technique in such a way that he (or she?) shaves through the beard with perfect ease and comfort regardless of the beard. For example, there are differences in my own beard between cheek whiskers, moustache whiskers, neck whiskers, and jawline whiskers. The individual hairs vary in thickness, stiffness, the angle at which the grow out of the skin, proximity to other hairs, the direction which they grow out of the skin, and even cross-sectional shape. I don't necessarily need to analyze each of these variables in order to most effectively shave them, but by much practice in feel, and trial and error, I can adapt my manipulation of the razor to efficiently meet the demands of whatever whisker is in front of it. Sometimes it is as simple as changing the direction I shave with the razor, but sometimes it means changing stroke length, angle of the blade, firmness of grip, related angle of razor's edge to direction of the stroke, and other hard-to-define subtle differences that come with practice
I hope a barber can jump in and shed light on how he or she actually adjusts to different beard types