Poor hygiene is one of the main causes of irritation, infection and razor burn. But it’s not your hygiene we’re talking about — though we hope you wash your face. Instead, it’s the cleanliness of the tools you cut your facial, body and head hair with.
Think of all the gunk that collects in those razors: dead skin, hair clippings, congealed body oils, shaving creams — and that’s just from the shave itself. If you store a blade improperly, it’s going to collect dust, dirt and all kinds of nasty germs — precisely the kinds of things you don’t want coming into contact with vulnerable skin pores.
Thankfully, there’s an easy way to lessen the likelihood of ingrown hairs and infections: cleaning your equipment.
Below, we break down how to clean clippers, the type of tool barbers used on your head, razors, analog blades for your face and electric shavers, loud, buzzing devices that run on batteries or an electric charge.
How to Clean Clippers
Clippers are the hair-cutting tool of choice for most barbers. Though they buzz quite loudly, they cut through even the thickest hair with ease. They’re a barber’s workhorse, if you will.
If you own your own pair of clippers, you probably cut your own hair, maintain an incredible beard or maintain your kids’ or partner’s hair. In this case, you’re only cutting a few folks’ heads, and you know where they’ve been. You don’t need to worry about sanitizing your clippers are intensely as barbers do — they do it after every single cut — but you should still keep them clean. Here’s how.