Hi there,
Keeping in mind that I'm still a newbie with only a handful of straight razor shaves under my belt, I'll share with you some tips that have worked for me.
About the jaw line, try grabbing the skin around the bottom of your cheek and pulling it upwards as tight as you can. The goal is to pull the skin/whiskers around the jawline upwards so it's flatter and easier to shave. I find that tilting my head down a little makes this easier because it gives the skin in that jaw line area some slack which to pull.
About the bottom of the neck, that part's pretty easy for me. Tilt your head upwards to make the skin around your neck tight, and place your pointer finger flat, horizontal to your jawline, at the base of your neck. Use that finger to pull the skin down real tight. The whiskers on my neck mostly go up, so at this point, I just start from the bottom and shave upwards, at least the first time/pass. It took some getting used to shaving at that weird upwards angle. What I've learned from it is to be real careful when initially putting the edge in contact with your skin (it's easy to slightly cut yourself there) and then once you start moving the blade upwards (again, if your whiskers also go up on your neck), try to use the momentum to your advantage and move the blade as far as you can as long as it's cutting smoothly.
Besides that, related to the neck in general and tough areas on the neck. one valuable thing I learned from Lynn's DVD is to pull the skin on your neck either to the right or left (instead of down). So, you're still tightening the skin, but pulling it from a different angle. Very helpful for tough areas on the neck where there's a curvature that the blade misses. Going back to the jawline, something else that Lynn pointed out that's applicable is to try shaving the jawline sideways instead of down or up. I'm still working on that method but I see the logic in it.
Last edited by modul8r; 10-02-2008 at 04:50 PM.
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