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Thread: W. Greaves & Sons circa 1820

  1. #1
    Senior Member karlej's Avatar
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    Default W. Greaves & Sons circa 1820

    An early W. Greaves and Sons 6/8 with a round toe and fancy spine. Circa 1820. The blade was too corroded to determine the original finish. A glaze finish was chosen to mask some light pitting that remains around the makers stamp. I believe a glazed finish was also the most common finish used. The shape of the original scales were copied with a lead wedge in honey horn and are .105 thick. The original steel collars were used in the restoration. In process pictures are off the 400 grit belt and the bevel set on a 1K.
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  2. #2
    Senior Member blabbermouth ScoutHikerDad's Avatar
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    Another stunner-Man, I would probably pay to watch you take one of those old junker blades to the beautiful, even lustre you get on your restores.
    karlej likes this.

  3. #3
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    The shave was wonderful!!!
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    How do you hone the area where you have the fancy cut at the toe of the razor since where the spine would be it's ground away?

  6. #5
    Senior Member karlej's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by thp001 View Post
    How do you hone the area where you have the fancy cut at the toe of the razor since where the spine would be it's ground away?
    One layer of tape and honed with a rolling X stroke like any other smiling blade. The wear on the tape was right along the edge of the cut out spine.
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    Senior Member DoughBoy68's Avatar
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    Beautiful job! Greaves are some mighty fine shavers. I have a W. Greaves & Sons frameback circa 1813-1830 (I believe) in honey horn scales and is one of my finest shavers.
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    "If You Knew Half of What I Forgot You Would Be An Idiot" - by DoughBoy68

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