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Thread: Seldom seen Mottram & Sons
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12-17-2016, 05:19 PM #11
Some like them shiny. Some, notsomuch.
One thing is for certain, you have done a wonderful, shiny job, Karl!
Beautiful razor, that! The history is a pleasant bonus, as-always!
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12-17-2016, 06:26 PM #12
The blade was reground. All the profiles are nice and crisp and have been maintained. If you look close you can see the sharp line at the tang undercut and sharp lines where the shoulder meets the blade faces. The hone wear visible at the spine is now gone and there is a crisp edge where the blade face meets the spine. Here's a closer picture of the area many folks wipe out on a buffer. Just my poor photography. Sorry you don't care for the crocus finish. We all have different tastes. Hard to say what the original finish was since the blade was in such poor condition. The crocus finish is a lot more work than a glazed finish. I have original blades finished as such and some with the more common but lesser quality glazed finish.
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12-18-2016, 02:08 PM #13
Being new to all of this i was thrown by his comment. But after some studying i think i see. The spine is not as much seen any longer? More blade face now? Like have the edge of the spine is missing. Thinking with a lot of hone ware this is just a nicer look. Just guessing. I wouldnt have picked up on that before. Not that it matters to me. I love shinny things! Its a beauty!
It's just Sharpening, right?
Jerry...
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12-18-2016, 02:11 PM #14
Beautiful, and I think we have the same stain on our back decks....send the razor here and I'll take a pic for comparison.
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12-20-2016, 07:05 AM #15
- Join Date
- Dec 2016
- Location
- Bassfield MS
- Posts
- 105
Thanked: 23Very nicely done, and love the horn, it's one of my favorite handle materials providing you can keep the dermestid beetle larvae from eating holes in it. Keep it waxed and keep moth balls in the house generally does the trick. One thing to remember, it's hard to take good pics of a mirror finish, and from what I can see it looks like you pretty well kept the sharp corners and edges. That said, when I was first learning to mirror polish I would wipe out any transitions from over buffing. A mirror finish is also more corrosion resistant than a hand rubbed or scotch bright finish. Of course, in a working knife it'll show up the least little scratch or wear mark from use, but I'd hope a SR doesn't get the abuse a hunter does. In any event, it's a beauty and I'd be proud to have it for a shaver.