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-   -   My First Knife (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=25523)

footfootfoot 02-24-2012 04:45 PM

From a link on that pr0n site of yours.
You know how people say "Ooh, I want one of those."? Well, I need one of these:

BigV 02-24-2012 06:03 PM

whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
--pause, regrip--
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
...

ahh... I'm done chopping wood now.

footfootfoot 02-24-2012 06:50 PM

start carrying water, then.

infinite monkey 02-24-2012 10:08 PM

But there's a hole in the bucket, dear martha, dear martha.

xoxoxoBruce 02-25-2012 12:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Perry Winkle (Post 797529)
I'm with F3 on the price. No less than $4-5k and as much as $8k. Maybe as high as $10-$12k depending on how much of a name John White is. (I don't keep up with the collector market.) It is a full-on art knife. It will not be used. Never. Okay, it might if you are very rich or you are just slicing scraps of paper.

Thanks, those prices are believable, but I think 40 hours is way short, 120 is believable since he had to start over when he was way along with the blade.

Slicing paper, or perhaps Mr. Boddy in the Library.;)

Griff 02-25-2012 08:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 797609)
From a link on that pr0n site of yours.
You know how people say "Ooh, I want one of those."? Well, I need one of these:

I want to do that when I grow up.

glatt 02-25-2012 08:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff (Post 797714)
I want to do that when I grow up.

That was awesome.

Perry Winkle 02-25-2012 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 797609)
You know how people say "Ooh, I want one of those."? Well, I need one of these.

Very cool. I'm pretty impressed that the axe head was constructed traditionally. A lot of folks just make the entire thing out of steel, instead of splitting mild steel and welding in steel at the edge.

Making some hammers and axes is on my list of things to try, when I can find some room in the supplies budget.

I've been making a few nails here and there to practice hammer control. It takes me 5-10 minutes for each one. Fun and good practice, but those nails are expensive!

footfootfoot 02-25-2012 10:57 AM

People used to burn down their cabins when they moved so they could collect the nails for the next cabin they'd build.

Perry Winkle 02-25-2012 11:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 797736)
People used to burn down their cabins when they moved so they could collect the nails for the next cabin they'd build.

That reminded me of Jonathan Nedbor. He came to teach at a local blacksmith workshop last year. His home/shop is in High Falls, NY. He is a student of Dutch Colonial ironwork.

He talked about this and how nails retrieved this way would be straightened by children.

Unfortunately he has no web presence. If you are ever down in his neck of the woods, I would stop by.

footfootfoot 02-25-2012 11:51 AM

I'm trying to get my children to sort my miscellaneous fasteners into broad categories. nails, screws, bolts. They are pretty good, but the attention span isn't there. Maybe I should put an audio book on for them...

BigV 02-25-2012 02:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 797736)
People used to burn down their cabins when they moved so they could collect the nails for the next cabin they'd build.

and to light the way forward, eh?

footfootfoot 02-25-2012 03:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigV (Post 797764)
and to light the way forward, eh?


ZenGum 02-25-2012 05:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigV (Post 797624)
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
--pause, regrip--
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
whack
...

ahh... I'm done chopping wood now.

"Chopping wood", eh? That what you teenagers are calling it nowadays? :jagoff:

Perry Winkle 02-27-2012 06:50 PM

I've got the first of two knives for classicman finished, packed and ready to ship tomorrow. It's going to BigV for a sheath.

When I've got my pennies lined up, I want to start making my own sheaths. I think I'll start with Kydex/thermoform sheeting sheaths. Which leads me to the next round of porn. Covering up that naked steel:
http://www.dorsetwoodlandblades.co.uk/howtokydex.htm

(Warning: These are somewhat in-depth, from what I've watched so far.)


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