#908 in Shaving products

Reddit mentions of Finishing Touch Flawless Legs Women's Hair Remover

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 1

We found 1 Reddit mentions of Finishing Touch Flawless Legs Women's Hair Remover. Here are the top ones.

Finishing Touch Flawless Legs Women's Hair Remover
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    Features:
  • 18-Karat Gold-Plated floating heads
  • 'Palm perfect' Design for superior control
  • No nicks, cuts or irritation.Care & Cleaning: Clean With Brush
  • No soap or water - Use anywhere, any time
  • Rechargeable and lighted
Specs:
ColorWhite/Rose Gold
Height8.75 Inches
Length7.25 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateJanuary 2018
Size1 Count (Pack of 1)
Weight0.19621141318 Pounds
Width3.5 Inches

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Found 1 comment on Finishing Touch Flawless Legs Women's Hair Remover:

u/TheNonCompliant · 7 pointsr/TrollXChromosomes

So I looked more into it, because I have no life and it amuses me to type it all out. Already knew the whole “women must shave this or that body part for reasons” industry was started in sexism, fashion, and imitating celebrities, but my annoyance mainly comes from the actual shaving or hair removal products themselves. These are equally advanced or held back by sexism, and the more recent history is both fascinating and frustrating to look back on. The basic history is this:

In 1770-ish, Jean-Jacques Perret wrote a guide on shaving and seemingly invented the Perret razor of a blade fixed to a handle, i.e. the straight edge, which looked like a small machete for your face.

In 1847, William S. Henson produced a razor with blades set at right angles to the handle, and in 1880 the term “safety razor” was patented by some dude or other.

In 1898, John F. O’Rourke invented the electric razor.

In 1901/1904, American inventor King Camp Gillette (no royal affiliation) and William Nickerson patented a new design of safety razor as well as disposable blades.

In 1939(?), Professor Alexandre Horowitz invented the Philishave rotary electric razor (for the Phillips company).

In 1940, it seems Remington made the first women’s electric razor, Lady Schick, the design of which hasn’t changed too much since as far as some budget electric razors go.

In 1966, Phillips added the 3rd rotary head to their razors, making the style we tend to see today in men’s rotary razors.

More modern, “nicer” women’s razors still tend to look like this style, a design men had in the early 90’s, if not earlier. Meanwhile, I’ve seen exactly one long-handled (non-octopi-shaped) women’s rotary razor and attempting to find who makes it, for the purpose of this mini history lesson, is annoying as hell because it only popped up in one random Pinterest image and that turned out not to lead to the product.

Now the popular thing is the octopi-shaped design by Finishing Touch and their competitors. Tried to find when exactly that style got invented/patented, but it’s proving too difficult. Though I’m pretty sure I started seeing them advertised towards women around…. 2010 maybe? Amusingly, it’s the same design as the electric shavers advertised for men’s bald heads, so guess which probably came first. All in all, the Finishing Touch design is about 44 years after Phillips added the 3rd rotary head and 95 years after Gillette started “The First Great Anti-Underarm Hair Campaign”.

I’m just saying, for the TL;DR that if men want women to shave everywhere, why is the industry so slow to further implement (edit: and market) better designs for women?