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Thread: Gelle Aine & Cie
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07-28-2010, 07:01 AM #1
Gelle Aine & Cie
This 7/8 straight razor is marked GELLÉ AINÉ & CIÉ, PARIS. Although not marked such, it would appear to have been made by Rameau à Sens. I suppose you could call it a faux frameback .
For the most part it had a nice patina, but there were also spots of deep rust, so sand and polish away . Scales were of black horn with a white bone wedge. At the time I didn't think were original. I thought the original scales must be a mismatch to the blade, and why I went to replace them, maybe wrongly so. I have since, put them on a different blade. When fully closed, the blade would rub against the rear of the wedge. In hindsight, that may have been a feature. Almost 1/8" of the sharp side of the blade would be extended below the bottom of the scales when fully closed. With care, if not closed fully, and only closing until it rubbed the wedge, it would not protrude. Although when left this way it had an odd angle of the spine not running parallel to the top of the scales.
For some reason I thought this French blade would be fun with sparkly scales. I got the glitter purple acrylic from gentlemensbest.com, sanding down to the shape I liked. It is impossible to capture the 3D sparkle and depth of the scales with the camera. I hadn't thought of using this vendor, until reading an SRP post asking about them (thanks that original poster and SRP!)
I thought the purple and sparkle were reminiscent of stars against a midnight sky, so with the brass pins, stars are used as washers. The stars are 5mm solid "brass floret spacer beads" that I found reasonably priced at ebay, sanding them down to my desired thickness.
Continuing with the purple and gold is a brass wedge that was hammered and sanded down from some flat stock.
Originally I couldn't find any information about the razor, but I think I have learned some history since, and will post that elsewhere later.
before
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07-28-2010, 07:32 AM #2
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The Following User Says Thank You to eTom For This Useful Post:
dirtychrome (07-28-2010)
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07-28-2010, 08:36 AM #3
Nice job! It looks really good..!
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The Following User Says Thank You to Stubear For This Useful Post:
dirtychrome (07-28-2010)
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07-28-2010, 11:57 AM #4
Glen did this didn't he?? Very nice.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Scipio For This Useful Post:
dirtychrome (07-28-2010)
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07-28-2010, 12:15 PM #5
Very nice work. It looks great!
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The Following User Says Thank You to LegalBeagle For This Useful Post:
dirtychrome (07-28-2010)
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07-28-2010, 01:31 PM #6
Is that a pot of Weiqi (Go) playing pieces?
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The Following User Says Thank You to ganboyi For This Useful Post:
dirtychrome (07-28-2010)
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07-28-2010, 02:22 PM #7
- Join Date
- Dec 2006
- Location
- Henderson, NV
- Posts
- 126
Thanked: 39Very nice !!!!
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The Following User Says Thank You to ccgnet For This Useful Post:
dirtychrome (07-28-2010)
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07-28-2010, 05:38 PM #8
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The Following User Says Thank You to Philadelph For This Useful Post:
dirtychrome (07-28-2010)
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07-28-2010, 06:12 PM #9
Nice 碁笥 you have there - does it double as a lather bowl?
Not sure if it goes with the French blade, but that's ok
Congrats on your 'new' razor!Find me on SRP's official chat in ##srp on Freenode. Link is at top of SRP's homepage
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The Following User Says Thank You to hoglahoo For This Useful Post:
dirtychrome (07-28-2010)
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07-28-2010, 10:47 PM #10
Even said in jest, I beam with pride. Now go apologize to Glen for the slandering his name.
Good eye! Yes, they are slate Go stones, I don't know the wood of the bowl. I had kinda hoped no one would take notice and catch that.
When I started to take the picks I was using a cut glass tumbler for the prop, but the Arizona mid-afternoon sun was way to bright for it.
The Go board was sitting out, so thought the flat black of the stones may help to suck up some of the light. I too thought the French/Asian mix was wrong. Although, I'm stretching to think this: since the image does combine two of my passions and heck the acrylic and brass stars probably came from the far East anyway maybe it is a good mix!
Funny you mentioned. No it doesn't, but I do use a small Korean hot pot and it works great with that extra thick ceramic!