While a lot of people have re-purposed these buffing wheel compound sticks (if the vehicle is a fairly hard wax at room temp it's for use with buffing wheels) they are not the correct way to charge a hand strop. They just aren't. They generally result in a total coating of the leather making the leather itself irrelevant. And it's not irrelevant. A lot of people use these things and a lot of people are wrong on this.
If you can find any classical reference that advises charging a leather strop with wax or something containing wax I'd love to see it.[/quote]
It's certainly not a repurposing - LV specifically claim it's usable for hand honing. As you know, older references tend to be scanty on detail, especially detail that was considered "obvious" at the time, but I'll see what I can find.
Ah - in the midst of another "discussion" I'd already found this:
BugBear[/quote]
What you describe is perfect -- an abrasive in a fatty/oily base which combine to form a fairly thin paste which makes it easy to charge leather correctly - which means very lightly and well-rubbed in and essentially almost invisible to the eye. The green sticks are anything but....
If you can find any classical reference that advises charging a leather strop with wax or something containing wax I'd love to see it.[/quote]
It's certainly not a repurposing - LV specifically claim it's usable for hand honing. As you know, older references tend to be scanty on detail, especially detail that was considered "obvious" at the time, but I'll see what I can find.
Ah - in the midst of another "discussion" I'd already found this:
Henry Mayhew 1851":e1efmk0p said:There are twelve street-sellers of razor-paste, but they seem to prefer " working" the distant suburbs, or going on country rounds, as there are often only three in London. It is still vended, I am told, to clerks, who use it to sharpen their pen-knives, but the paste, owing to the prevalence of the use of steel pens, is now atmost a superfluity, compared to what it was. It is bought also, and frequently enough in public-houses, by working-men, as a means of "setting" their razors. The venders make the paste themselves, except two, who purchase of a street-seller. The ingredients are generally fuller's earth (Id.), hog's lard (Id.), and emery powder (2<Z.). The paste is sold in boxes carried on a tray, which will close and form a sort of case, like a backgammon board. The quantity I have given will make a dozen boxes (each sold at Id.), so that the profit is Id. in the Is., for to the id. paid for ingredients must be added Id., for the cost of a dozen boxes. The paste is announced as " warranted to put an edge to a razor or penknife superior to any thing ever before offered to the public." The street-sellers offer to prove this by sharpening any gentleman's penknife on the paste spread on a piece of soldier's old belt, which sharpening, when required, they accomplish readily enough. One of these paste-sellers, I was told, had been apprenticed to a barber; another had been a cutter, the remainder are of the ordinary class of street-sellers.
Calculating that 6 men " work" the metropolis daily, taking 2s. each per day (with Is. 2d. profit), we find 187/. the amount of the street outlay.
BugBear[/quote]
What you describe is perfect -- an abrasive in a fatty/oily base which combine to form a fairly thin paste which makes it easy to charge leather correctly - which means very lightly and well-rubbed in and essentially almost invisible to the eye. The green sticks are anything but....