Bonnie I love watching your videos and I love your personality ! I’m a hairdresser who mainly does cutting, the area we’re in is rather under-saturated with reliable sharpeners so I got the idea to learn ! I bought the twice as sharp okami gold system. I’ve sharpened all my shears and some coworkers shears after watching a lot of your videos and some from Wolffe industries. I haven’t run into any problems yet and I think it’s pretty easy (I haven’t gotten any problematic shears but I’d probably just walk away from those). So do you think I should get a certification from a class before I really start advertising? Thanks for your videos! God bless.
"That's why God gave us the Bible" - amen! Less than 2 minutes in and you've delivered more wisdom than the majority of youtube videos combined. Thank you Bonnie, and thank you for really "getting" the benefit of this medium.
There really is none. With Jaguar we have a brochure with the angles free on our website, but I find only a scratch test will give the proper angle. I look up the shears on Google search just to see if they are an expensive shear, which will probably take a sharpener angle or a cheap scissor, then I go blunter.
When they put the pressure in the wrong place, there is a rideline along the back edge and the tip is wiped out in most cases...... or there is not rideline at all if the shears were honed or in other words were supposed to have a rideline.
Funny story. I purchased a cheap lefty to practice on. I use TAS, so I changed my wheels around. Did everything that I usually do to sharpen. Now I am right-handed, so it all feels really weird . I get them done and put back together and test with single ply. Well, they will not cut correctly. Tips are OK, but the rest is awful. So I took them apart and started over. Got them done and put back together and still not cutting correctly. Suddenly I wondered, is it because I'm using them in my right hand ? So I googled it and sure enough, it said they will not cut properly in the wrong hand. So I tried them in my left hand and they cut perfectly. 😂😂
Great video as always Bonnie!
@@lyonsharpeningservice2896 thank you.
Bonnie I love watching your videos and I love your personality ! I’m a hairdresser who mainly does cutting, the area we’re in is rather under-saturated with reliable sharpeners so I got the idea to learn ! I bought the twice as sharp okami gold system. I’ve sharpened all my shears and some coworkers shears after watching a lot of your videos and some from Wolffe industries. I haven’t run into any problems yet and I think it’s pretty easy (I haven’t gotten any problematic shears but I’d probably just walk away from those). So do you think I should get a certification from a class before I really start advertising?
Thanks for your videos! God bless.
How are you on convex edges? Those are pretty hard to do on your equipment.
You should get a flat hone. It will help you out a LOT!
@@BonikaShears i find it pretty easy with the convexing clamp
"That's why God gave us the Bible" - amen! Less than 2 minutes in and you've delivered more wisdom than the majority of youtube videos combined.
Thank you Bonnie, and thank you for really "getting" the benefit of this medium.
@@andrewmiles2370 thank you for the comment. I was fearful that people would say less talking and more sharpening,
what website do you use to look up the proper make and angle for the sicssors? In a previous video you mention one but I coudn't find it.
Thanks!
There really is none. With Jaguar we have a brochure with the angles free on our website, but I find only a scratch test will give the proper angle. I look up the shears on Google search just to see if they are an expensive shear, which will probably take a sharpener angle or a cheap scissor, then I go blunter.
Hi Bonnie, how do you see when a sharpener puts the pressure wrong when looking at the shear like in this video?
Different pressure or alignment issue will cause rideline width variance from pivot to tip.
When they put the pressure in the wrong place, there is a rideline along the back edge and the tip is wiped out in most cases...... or there is not rideline at all if the shears were honed or in other words were supposed to have a rideline.
@@BonikaShears thank you
Bonnie,
I noticed you stoned one half then on to the wheel however on the other half of the shear you stoned after the wheel did I miss something?
I did both blades on the stone before and after. Maybe the cut on the video to keep it from being too long missed that.
Funny story. I purchased a cheap lefty to practice on. I use TAS, so I changed my wheels around. Did everything that I usually do to sharpen. Now I am right-handed, so it all feels really weird . I get them done and put back together and test with single ply. Well, they will not cut correctly. Tips are OK, but the rest is awful. So I took them apart and started over. Got them done and put back together and still not cutting correctly. Suddenly I wondered, is it because I'm using them in my right hand ? So I googled it and sure enough, it said they will not cut properly in the wrong hand. So I tried them in my left hand and they cut perfectly. 😂😂