How old are you? A demographic poll
How old are you? A demographic poll
Just wondering what the average age is here. It seems an older and wiser demo here than elsewhere. No need to fess up, just click and run.
~Scott
- desertbadger
- Posts: 4192
- Joined: Tue Jan 20, 2009 8:42 pm
- Location: Southern CA desert
- GA Russell
- Posts: 3070
- Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2008 10:15 pm
- Location: Raleigh, NC
Old enough to have seen the original new wave punk bands at the The Camden Theatre (aka The Music Machine, and these days, Koko). Believe me, the new wave wasn't that fantastic in the London of the mid 1970's. I still preferred that which had gone before.
The Kings Road might have been where the punks had their photos taken, but Camden was where their bands performed. Either way, I had more time for the Greek Cypriot restaurants of Camden, the Irish pubs of the same, and for BBC Radio 3, which in those days broadcast some real music.
52, by the way, and my father used a DE all his life, and both my grandfathers used straights.
Chris
The Kings Road might have been where the punks had their photos taken, but Camden was where their bands performed. Either way, I had more time for the Greek Cypriot restaurants of Camden, the Irish pubs of the same, and for BBC Radio 3, which in those days broadcast some real music.
52, by the way, and my father used a DE all his life, and both my grandfathers used straights.
Chris
"Je n'ai pas besoin de cette hypothèse."
Pierre-Simon de Laplace
Pierre-Simon de Laplace
I'm 58, and I've read that my birth year, 1951, was the most prolific of the Baby Boom.
My formative teen years were in the 1960s, I graduated from high school in 1970, and I will have my 40-year high school reunion next month.
My father always shaved with a Gillette DE and canned foam. I learned on a Schick Injector and Noxzema canned foam, both of which I think were my mother's recommendations for an easier start and better protection for young skin.
- Murray
My formative teen years were in the 1960s, I graduated from high school in 1970, and I will have my 40-year high school reunion next month.
My father always shaved with a Gillette DE and canned foam. I learned on a Schick Injector and Noxzema canned foam, both of which I think were my mother's recommendations for an easier start and better protection for young skin.
- Murray
- GA Russell
- Posts: 3070
- Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2008 10:15 pm
- Location: Raleigh, NC
I do!!! I remember my father using a straight and then switching over to a safety razor. My grandfather always used a straight til his death in 1961.GA Russell wrote:I wonder what percentage of North American traditional wetshavers are old enough to remember a father using a safety razor or perhaps (like me) a grandfather using a straight.
Wayne...Semper Fi!
- Trumperman
- Bill Extraordinaire
- Posts: 2893
- Joined: Thu Dec 14, 2006 7:17 pm
- Location: Charlotte, NC
I'm an even 60. My father was using a Rolls when I started shaving and I followed suit. After many (pardon the pun) hairy moments I was given a Fat Boy. I used Fat Boys (on #3) until I fell from grace and succumbed to the carts. Going through my late Great Aunts estate about 8 years ago I came across my Great Uncle's late 30'e Tech. I was back on track.
Regards,
Bill
Regards,
Bill
Don't think......shave.
-
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- Contact:
That must have been very cool. SatB were influenced to start a band by the Pistols, Wire were an influence. They were not a punk band themselves. Siouxsie played the last show of her last tour at Koko.drmoss_ca wrote:Old enough to have seen the original new wave punk bands at the The Camden Theatre (aka The Music Machine, and these days, Koko). Believe me, the new wave wasn't that fantastic in the London of the mid 1970's. I still preferred that which had gone before.
The Kings Road might have been where the punks had their photos taken, but Camden was where their bands performed. Either way, I had more time for the Greek Cypriot restaurants of Camden, the Irish pubs of the same, and for BBC Radio 3, which in those days broadcast some real music.
52, by the way, and my father used a DE all his life, and both my grandfathers used straights.
Chris
~Scott
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- Posts: 150
- Joined: Wed Jul 08, 2009 10:47 am
- Location: Macomb, MI
For the record, I'm 40. Just old enough to barely remember my pops and grandpops using DE razors and blades and not old enough to remember anything but carts on the shelves. But then again, for most of my life shaving was a chore because I didn't know how to do it right or what equipment was best.
~Scott