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Thread: Joseph Turner near wedge

  1. #1
    Senior Member Ernie1980's Avatar
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    Default Joseph Turner near wedge

    I just finished up this razor this evening, and it turned out pretty well overall. I remembered to take before pictures this time! As you can see, it had some rough looking scales and a lot of patina and hone wear on the blade. What the pics don't show is the warp that I had to grind out so the edge could lay true!!
    Removing the extra metal (effectively wearing the spine a lot more) shows in the final product but made for a razor that lays flat and *should* be not overly difficult to hone except for fixing the current uneven bevil.
    I did not polish to a full mirror like I originally wanted because there were lots of deep tooling marks (plus my flattening grind) in the blade and I did not want to remove that much metal. In addition, I also wanted to keep the etch intact.


    I had to trash the original scales after attempting to fill the dents and fix the crack because they were simply too brittle. I went for some plain acrylic scales and put a satin finish on them. I glued the wedge for right now, but looking at it now I will probably go ahead and pin it tomorrow



  2. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Ernie1980 For This Useful Post:

    MikeB52 (01-08-2016), sharptonn (01-07-2016), Tomakao (01-07-2016)

  3. #2
    Razor Vulture sharptonn's Avatar
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    Cool piece of razor history back on the line.
    "Don't be stubborn. You are missing out."
    I rest my case.

  4. #3
    Senior Member Ernie1980's Avatar
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    Thanks!
    Can you date the razor? I am thinking 1850ish from what I read but have been known to be wrong
    sharptonn likes this.

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    Member Caihlen's Avatar
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    Very awesome! Nicely done.
    Just because I look stupid don't mean I ain't.

  6. #5
    Razor Vulture sharptonn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ernie1980 View Post
    Thanks!
    Can you date the razor? I am thinking 1850ish from what I read but have been known to be wrong
    I have finally found a bit. From Martin; http://straightrazorpalace.com/show-...n-history.html
    JimmyHAD likes this.
    "Don't be stubborn. You are missing out."
    I rest my case.

  7. The Following User Says Thank You to sharptonn For This Useful Post:

    JimmyHAD (01-08-2016)

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