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The Skarp is waterproof, so you can shave in the shower, too! There is no putrid, burnt hair smell, either, since the hair is not being burnt off. Let's the 21s Century shaving begin.
Despite this, the engineering team at Skarp have constructed a revolutionary razor which cuts hair without any blades. The high-tech design uses a laser to carefully remove hairs from your skin in ...
The £189 (£125) Skarp razor (pictured), built by Californian firm Skarp Technologies, is fitted with an optical fibre that contains a class one laser. that cuts through hair particles.
Skarp co-founder Morgan Gustavsson claims he invented “intense pulse light” as a hair-removal treatment in the 1980s. He and business partner Paul Binun applied for a patent for the laser ...
The Skarp is a new device seeking funding on Kickstarter (and already well past its goal) that uses light, rather than sharpened steel, to sever the hairs that plague your chin or legs.
The Skarp is designed so that the laser never enters the skin; it only slices the hair with no risks of damage to the skin. It doesn't burn the hair or the face, so there is no smell.
A Kickstarter for a laser razor is promising that it can change the way we shave. Called Skarp, the Swedish word for "sharp," the razor uses newly ...
Given that our grooming kits have consisted of essentially the same tools for over 5,000 years, we think it's high-time the humble razor got a high-tech overhaul. Now, with over $1,000,000 pledged ...
Skarp’s move to Indiegogo has been lauded by some – mostly in the comments section of the Indiegogo campaign – and has been derided on every other forum on the Internet.
Skarp Technologies The dream of the Skarp razor, which its creators said could shave your hair with a laser, was a powerful one. The Kickstarter project sped past its initial goal of $160,000 and ...
The dream of the Skarp razor, which its creators said could shave your hair with a laser, was a powerful one. The Kickstarter project sped past its initial goal of $160,000 and racked up an ...
The fundraising campaign led by Skarp, which you probably caught wind of, earned over $4 million as of early this week. However, Kickstarter pulled the plug on Tuesday, ...
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