Razor Honing
Razor honing is a sharpening process in which a razor's bevel (insert reference to bevel definition here) is skilfully cut and polished to form a fine, shaving edge. An adequately honed razor should be able to provide a comfortable shave. Once a razor has been honed, it is often stropped (see stropping) before each shave.
Depending on the condition of the razor's edge, there may be damage such as chips or pitting that needs to be addressed, or perhaps the existing bevel is unusable and needs to be completely reset. A razor in such condition will need more aggressive edge repair techniques before the actual honing can take place.
Contents
Razor hones
A hone is anything used to put a fine edge on a cutting tool. In this article hones refer to whetstones. For honing strops/abrasive films etc, see xxxx
Kinds of hones
Natural whetstones
Synthetic whetstones
Hone history
barber used coticules and eschers until synthetic barber hones came along. etc
Hone manufacturers and miners
The major hone makers today are blah, blah, and blah. There are still some mines in operation, blah and blah. Vendors can be found here (main article vendors, or possibly vendor links)
Using razor hones
Prepping a hone for use
Flatten the hone. main article lapping. Keep the hone surface clean. Some hones require soaking. Some hones should not be soaked.
Honing
Depending on a razor's condition, it may need its bevel set or reset (see main articles) before it can take a shaving edge. Some hones are better suited for this work than others. Some razors in poor condition may also need pre-bevel done such as regrinding, breadknifing, or other methods not usually considered to be honing although sometimes hones can be used for this kind of work.
Honing methods
main article progressive honing
main article pyramid honing
Application specific honing
main article Honing an ebay razor
main article One cot method
main article chip removal?
Storing hones (possibly separate article?)
don't let your norton get moldy