It really depends on the person’s skin, hair, and method of hair removal.
I can’t use blades, but my foil shaver works great as long as I exfoliate with a dermaplaner (at a 90° angle) after, and the next day. But foil shavers have a several week adjustment period while your skin gets used to it.
Epilators are also an option if you have a decent pain tolerance. Once you do it a few times, the pain drastically diminishes. Big downside is public hair roots are really stuck in there, so there’ll be some skin level breakages that are prone to becoming ingrow until the folical is ripped out a few times and gets weaker. But a foil shaver and dermaplaner fix that up for the most part.
It really depends on the person’s skin, hair, and method of hair removal.
I can’t use blades, but my foil shaver works great as long as I exfoliate with a dermaplaner (at a 90° angle) after, and the next day. But foil shavers have a several week adjustment period while your skin gets used to it.
Epilators are also an option if you have a decent pain tolerance. Once you do it a few times, the pain drastically diminishes. Big downside is public hair roots are really stuck in there, so there’ll be some skin level breakages that are prone to becoming ingrow until the folical is ripped out a few times and gets weaker. But a foil shaver and dermaplaner fix that up for the most part.