Quote from: VeronicaLynn on May 28, 2017, 05:41:53 PM
Sometimes the ones that curl back into the skin will have a small piece that's visible, it will look like a spot I missed shaving, but then after a few passes, it will be clear that it's starting to curl back in, and hard to tell which end has the root.
If I don't catch them, the skin will start to grow over them, and eventually the hair will get long and I'll get the red bump.
That's good info. Maybe I need to start inspecting the areas a little closer, especially by the relatively small areas I shave. So far, the largest most painful ones have been in the places that never see a razor.
Quote from: ElizabethK on May 28, 2017, 06:08:33 PM
When you are shaving are you heating your face properly...use a good quality gel/foam and something my father suggested was to use a old fashioned soap and brush set up to provide the lubrication rather than the easier foam. There action of the shaving brush will help loosen some of those hairs that can't break through in the same way that exfoliating will. It will also massage the beard area encouraging better circulation and better growth... it may be an urban myth...but it was the way my grandfather taught my father to shave and they way I learnt. IMHO Unless your skin is tough a couple of times a week with the exfoliating will do....why not try the beard oil...do you tend to let you beard hair grow out? or shave as soon as there is any length.
I usually just let it grow, to be honest. I want a beard
incredibly bad, and I know it currently looks terrible/weak, but I've waited so long for facial hair that I'm just working with what I've got. I trim the chinstrap and under the chin, however, I shave the cheeks and tend to shave a clean line below the chinstrap to shape it up since the hair is coming in heavily down around the Adam's Apple area.
This is what I'm talking about (I haven't trimmed or shaved for two weeks in this picture due to the doctor telling me to refrain):
http://pixady.com/image/t01/You can sort of see that the bigger spots are in the unshaved areas, while the smaller less invasive ones are in the spots the razor touches.
As far as the product I use to shave, I have a single-blade style razor and I use Cremo moisturizing shaving cream. I always shave after a shower, as well, and splash off with cool water when finished.
Though I'd like to eventually purchase and subsequently use a brush, I haven't yet for the same reason I haven't used beard oil. It feels... a little sad to call what I currently have a beard. It will definitely be a self-checkout situation when I go to buy those things, hahahah. If the brush action would help, I may just bite the bullet and go ahead and buy one along with some oil.