Results 1 to 10 of 11
Like Tree8Likes

Thread: Escher Droescher label similarities

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Senior Member doorsch's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    1,301
    Thanked: 540

    Default Escher Droescher label similarities

    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    With that example I think it is likely an Escher. I know that an Escher collector I knew had a Fox labelled hone that he said was a for sure Escher. What I tend to go by is the sizes of the cut stones. Escher had a few sizes that they manufactured, while Hohenzollern, another Thuringan stone company, had the colors, but different sized stones.
    Jimmy Hohenzollern hones have been sold from Severin Droescher....



    This was from here
    http://straightrazorpalace.com/hones...huringian.html
    Geezer likes this.
    ███▓▒░░.RAZORLOVESTONES.░░▒▓███

  2. The Following User Says Thank You to doorsch For This Useful Post:

    Geezer (09-17-2015)

  3. #2
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    sheffield
    Posts
    554
    Thanked: 55

    Default

    Droescher. The E in Droescher is a way of giving the same sound as an umlaut. It gets used most when keyboard has no umlaut or when working in a foreign language to German.
    "Ignorance is preferable to error, and he is less remote from the truth who believes nothing than he who believes what is wrong."-Thomas Jefferson (Notes on Virginia, 1782)

  4. #3
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    32,564
    Thanked: 11044

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by doorsch View Post
    Jimmy Hohenzollern hones have been sold from Severin Droescher....



    This was from here
    http://straightrazorpalace.com/hones...huringian.html
    Yeah, I know, but they weren't from Escher. A different source. Hence all of the sizes are different.
    Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.

  5. #4
    Senior Member doorsch's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    1,301
    Thanked: 540

    Default Escher Droescher label similarities

    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    Yeah, I know, but they weren't from Escher. A different source. Hence all of the sizes are different.
    Why could they have not been from Escher, as you see the similarities between Droescher and Escher labels i believe the source was from Escher on these cases, we also have the Escher labels with the S.R.D. sidelabels which says "manufactured expressly for S.R.D. In NY" E.S. (Escher & Son)...



    Any source on this statement Jimmy ? These could have been especially cut....
    Last edited by doorsch; 09-17-2015 at 05:15 PM.
    Geezer likes this.
    ███▓▒░░.RAZORLOVESTONES.░░▒▓███

  6. #5
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    32,564
    Thanked: 11044

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by doorsch View Post

    Any source on this statement Jimmy ? These could have been especially cut....
    I am making an assumption based on hones with both labels that have passed through my hands. I've had Hohenzollerns in all of the colors, and they were all the same size. Something like 7 or 8" x 2&1/2 or so, and thicker than Escher cut theirs. Most Eschers were 7x1&5/8, 3/4 thick, the BD were 6x2 IIRC. The large one was 10x2 and 7/8" thick. Rough measurements, I only have one 5x2&1/2x3/4 and a 7x1&5/8 now.

    I could be (shudder) wrong of course, I was wrong once before.

    Ask Kees, he has a y/g escher BD and a y/g Hohenzollern IIRC. I also felt that the stones weren't the same in performance and general characteristics, when I had both brands.
    Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.

  7. #6
    Senior Member doorsch's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    1,301
    Thanked: 540

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    I am making an assumption based on hones with both labels that have passed through my hands. I've had Hohenzollerns in all of the colors, and they were all the same size. Something like 7 or 8" x 2&1/2 or so, and thicker than Escher cut theirs. Most Eschers were 7x1&5/8, the BD were 6x2 IIRC. The large one was 10x2 and 7/8" thick. Rough measurements, I only have one 5x2&1/2x3/4 and a 7x1&5/8 now.

    I could be (shudder) wrong of course, I was wrong once before.

    Ask Kees, he has a y/g escher BD and a y/g Hohenzollern IIRC. I also felt that the stones weren't the same in performance and general characteristics, when I had both brands.
    Yeah can agree on that there might have been different qualities...this just due the different time frames stones have quarried and we have to know that the stones also had different origins in concerns of different quarries and different layers....

    And for sure Jimmy we cant reconstruate how it really was...as mentioned this were only my two cents...another one has different two cents...
    Geezer and Wolfpack34 like this.
    ███▓▒░░.RAZORLOVESTONES.░░▒▓███

  8. #7
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    32,564
    Thanked: 11044

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by doorsch View Post
    Yeah can agree on that there might have been different qualities...this just due the different time frames stones have quarried and we have to know that the stones also had different origins in concerns of different quarries and different layers....

    And for sure Jimmy we cant reconstruate how it really was...as mentioned this were only my two cents...another one has different two cents...
    This is something that has always interested me. Before we realized that the naturals are all 'ancient' no matter if they were quarried 100 years ago, or yesterday, people used to say that the 'old' ones were better.

    I've suspected that they may have been better, simply because there was more to choose from. More veins and more quarries. As the supply was used up, less and less to choose from. OTOH, maybe some veins we dig up now are better than those quarried in the past ........
    Geezer likes this.
    Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.

  9. #8
    Senior Member Wolfpack34's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,596
    Thanked: 865

    Default

    I agree with Doorsch in that the ones that are marked with ES are certainly IMO from Escher, and also that there are always going to be differences in feel and performance. After all these are Natural Stones. I have a Pike, Droescher, and Rochestor Extra Choice, that are just like my labeled Eschers. Different but performance is comparable in all of them. My favorite is my blue green Barber's Gem...
    Lupus Cohors - Appellant Mors !

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •