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Thread: The New Ottoman Egyptain And Royal Windsor Razor

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  1. #1
    Senior Member tiddle's Avatar
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    Beautiful work. kudos to you sir, very nice razor indeed.
    Mastering implies there is nothing more for you to learn of something... I prefer proficient enough to not totally screw it up.

  2. #2
    Pi3
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    Amazing work!

    Cheers.
    Rule #32 – Enjoy the Little Things

  3. #3
    GAP
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    Stunning razor. Afrian Blackwood does make beautiful classic scales. One lucky owner.
    "A friend asks only for your time, not your money"

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    Senior Member JoeLowett's Avatar
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    I have wanted one of those razors for a long time. Nice to know that there could be an alternative, considering the original razors popularity and scarcity.
    ......... Making Old Razors Shine N' Shave, Once Again.
    -"Sheffield Style"

  5. #5
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    Wow! I did not expect to get so much reaction. Thank you.

    Concerning the thickness of the spine in relation to the wideness of the blade: This is true, when i made this razor i was new to it, and made this mistake. But with 2 layers of tape, honing works fine.

    The customer just asked me per mail to show you another Ottoman, this time an Original.
    After years of research he finaly found an Ottoman Blade, but without handle. Because of circumstances that he may tell you if he wants, the blade got broken.....

    When he told me about this disaster i asked him to send me the pieces so i could try my best to save this exeptional blade.

    Here is the result (the scales are not my work, i just finished them):

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    cheers,
    Ulrik

  6. The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Ulrik For This Useful Post:

    bongo (07-03-2013), lotse (07-05-2013), Phrank (09-08-2024), sashimi (07-03-2013), walleyeman (07-03-2013)

  7. #6
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Very very nice work on both razors. I would be interested to know the process, unless it is a trade secret and I understand that, you used to fix the broken blade.

    Bob
    Life is a terminal illness in the end

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    Thank you Bob.
    It is no secret at all. I used silver solder paste (meltingpoint 650°C). The difficulty was not to harm the hardness of the blade. Therefore i covered it with wet tissues and added new water while the hole soldering process. To get enough heat i used a propan/oxygen burner with a very fin but hot flame. It was a hard task but it worked. Only the tang is soft, the blade itself did not loose any hardness.

    cheers,
    Ulrik
    Phrank likes this.

  9. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Ulrik For This Useful Post:

    BobH (07-02-2013), Phrank (09-08-2024), Smoothy (07-29-2013)

  10. #8
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ulrik View Post
    Thank you Bob.
    It is no secret at all. I used silver solder paste (meltingpoint 650°C). The difficulty was not to harm the hardness of the blade. Therefore i covered it with wet tissues and added new water while the hole soldering process. To get enough heat i used a propan/oxygen burner with a very fin but hot flame. It was a hard task but it worked. Only the tang is soft, the blade itself did not loose any hardness.

    cheers,
    Ulrik
    Amazing, if I did not see it I wouldn't have believed it could be done. Great work !
    Phrank and JoelLewicki like this.

  11. #9
    Historically Inquisitive Martin103's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    Amazing, if I did not see it I wouldn't have believed it could be done. Great work !
    +1 for that repair! And the original razor looks great as well!
    Phrank likes this.

  12. #10
    Senior Member Thisisclog's Avatar
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    Both are beautiful, but I think you may have outdone the original with your replica. Great lines!
    Jon

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