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  1. #1
    Senior Member blabbermouth Geezer's Avatar
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    Exclamation Planning ahead...Inventory

    There will be always persons with disposable income. So whatever the economy, there will be sales of good quality razors and hones. Think ahead!

    I am sorting an accumulation of 100+ ancient and modern safety razors for an antique store owner who bought a legacy. He will make ~40 times their outlay on the investment over the next 6 months and more in the following months. The kids wanted "cash now!"

    I am an old geezer, I may have many years left of getting into trouble but I know how hard it is to sort out a legacy after someone dies. Keep all the stuff together and in places the survivors will know about!!

    'Spent yesterday with a cheap diamond plate and slurry stones, flattening my hones. I used a permanent magic marker and marked each on the back side, or in the case of double hones the sides, with what the stone type was and approximate grit. That info will eventually wear off so it needs updating on often used or favorite hones.

    Perhaps a small permanently printed paper stick-on label on the back side of the blade will be my answer as to marking my non-used blades. Do not put sticky labels on the scales. The scales oxidize and the label ghost will be bright and the rest dull. Some of the razors are now going into display frames for my wall. Only the pretty ones and best quality will go there. The rest of them, properly oiled, are in, or will go into plastic storage boxes with some vents. I add camphor blocks to each box. As a young machinist I found special sponges made for tool boxes to prevent rust from forming; they were just thin sponges impregnated with camphor oil and they worked!

    I am starting an inventory also. Surviving beneficiaries often want immediate sale and, therefore, having all the info in a book and, where possible on the items, my kids will have it better than I did. The book should be known to the beneficiaries and not kept with the collection but separately! Might be a thought to place purchase prices into that book also. A hobby can become a business!

    So, again, think ahead. Death is sure; not knowing when and how is what makes life enjoyable.

    Very Respectfully
    ~Richard
    I am cross posting this.
    Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.
    - Oscar Wilde

  2. #2
    The Hurdy Gurdy Man thebigspendur's Avatar
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    yes you are correct. So many things that are inherited go off into some attic or basement never to see the light of day again and are then either forgotten about or slowly deteriorate or are thrown away as trash generations later.
    No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero

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