When I became more environmentally conscious many years ago, I decided to switch to a safety razor to reduce plastic waste. I landed on a reputable safety razor with a ‘mild’ angle, something that would be good for sensitive skin. Even with a good shaving soap, I found that I would regularly still get some discomfort from razor burn, despite learning a solid technique.

Enter: the Henson. This was touted as a ‘new’ design of safety razor that fully supported the blade, making it particularly well suited for sensitive skin, and much harder to nick yourself.

Well, I’ve been using this thing for a few months now, and I can honestly say the marketing isn’t an exaggeration, it’s been a game-changer for me.

It really is MUCH harder to nick myself with this, to the point where I can press it against my skin firmly like a disposable, and I still don’t get irritation. It’s one of the most pleasant shaving experiences I’ve had, and I can heartily recommend one for anyone who wants a truly mild safety razor.

Its made of machined aluminum, and built to tight tolerances. I anticipate I’ll be using this sucker quite literally for the rest of my life.

Though do bear in mind, If you have a thick beard or non-sensitive skin, the mild henson might not be ideal for you. As an example I still use my old razor with it’s more exposed blade to shave my head, as this henson gets clogged up far too quickly for that application (unless the hair is already really short). But for the face with light facial hair? Perfection.

  • @captainlezbian
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    101 year ago

    I’ve considered it, but as someone with meh dexterity who does very quick and lazy shaves I’ve heard bad things about safety razors for my use case, is that the case for these as well? I hate using plastic razors, but the whole “shaving ritual” thing sounds awful compared to my 30 second shave

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      I can come out of the shower with soap on my face and shave in less than a minute with a blade I haven’t replaced in awhile (though blades are cheap). I don’t feel like I have to be particularly careful, just go over every piece of skin once. I haven’t cut myself in years. I don’t have OPs razor but just a generic safety razor from Amazon.

    • @_lilith
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      61 year ago

      I don’t have this exact razor but a similar model that works for sensitive skin. Most of the time lost on the shaving ritual for me is getting a froth from a bar of shave soap. Back when I had to shave every day I used shave butter and a safety razor and was able to get it done in about a minute being somewhat careful. I get a closer shave with the safety razor than I ever did with the bic razors I used to use so I think that makes up for some time lost shaving

    • lad
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      41 year ago

      I also preferred quick and lazy before getting a safety razor, bleeded a lot, too.

      With the safety I’d recommend always starting the shave in the direction of hair growth and then doing across and against if you feel like it. You can find more instructions on-line, I wish I had this advice earlier, that would have helped a lot even with cartridges.

    • @grayman
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      41 year ago

      The only hard rule is don’t move it sideways against your skin. You’ll slice it. Not deep but it will bleed and hurt. Get one that is adjustable or angled for sensitive skin.

      I think electric is faster but I prefer the smoothness of the safety razor. Safety razor takes me about 2-3 minutes in the shower.

    • ProdigalFrogOPM
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      1 year ago

      I’ve found the whole ritual aspect is pretty much unnecessary, and I kinda regret buying some of the accessories that people in shaving forums say is needed, like a lathering bowl (Honestly you can apply a fancy shaving cream directly to a wet bristle brush and it works just as well, and regular old barbasol has worked fine too).

      A safety razor would work fine for your use case, but a henson especially, since they’re pretty much just as easy and safe to use as a cartridge razor. Like others said, you can still cut yourself if you make sideways motions with the blade, but I think that’s probably true for cartridge razors too.

      If you want to get a budget razor just to see if it’s something that would work for you, the Lord L6 is actually pretty well regarded, and only costs like 7 bucks.