Results 141 to 150 of 429
Thread: Bengall's Band of Brothers
-
05-27-2011, 01:33 PM #141
- Join Date
- Apr 2009
- Location
- Coffs Harbour Australia, Home of the Big Banana
- Posts
- 2,706
Thanked: 1072Here's a pic of how my Bengall from post #112 turned out after some restoration, and another one which I recently put some burl scales on. Both sweet shavers of course.
Grant
"I aint like that no more...my wife, she cured me of drinking and wickedness"
Clint Eastwood as William Munny in Unforgiven
-
05-27-2011, 02:13 PM #142
Just beautiful! How did most (seemingly) of the world's Bengalls end up in Oz?
"If you ever get the pipes in good chune, your troubles have just begun."--Seamus Ennis
-
05-28-2011, 12:32 AM #143
- Join Date
- Jun 2010
- Location
- Brisbane/Redcliffe, Australia
- Posts
- 6,380
Thanked: 983We didn't get into a hissy fit with the Brits like you Yanks did back in the day...So you missed out!
Mick
-
05-28-2011, 01:12 AM #144
- Join Date
- Jan 2009
- Location
- Michigan
- Posts
- 178
Thanked: 45Here's my Bengall cast steel razor with new horn scales that I made. I found it at a flea market with "modern" black celluloid scales which I didn't care for. It's a pretty old razor and I thought the horn would be a good choice.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to mattluthier For This Useful Post:
itlives (09-08-2011)
-
06-01-2011, 10:18 AM #145
- Join Date
- May 2011
- Location
- Cowra, New South Wales, Australia
- Posts
- 579
Thanked: 46Ok, having read through this thread in it's entirety, and being absolutely stunned by some of the beautiful work here, I feel I should mention a little something.
In this post: http://straightrazorpalace.com/razor...tml#post485230 the small Australian town of Cowra is mentioned as a small chapter in the life journey of one Alfred Edments. That's where I live, in fact I grew up here only leaving town to undertake my apprenticeship as an electrician with Lithgow Small Arms factory (where I acquired a rather nice, unused WWII bayonet), start my family and then turn around and bring the whole brood back here again.
Sorry to hijack the thread, just a little tangent.
-
06-01-2011, 01:26 PM #146
- Join Date
- Jun 2010
- Location
- Brisbane/Redcliffe, Australia
- Posts
- 6,380
Thanked: 983You'd find a bit of interesting history in many razors I suspect. If only they could speak...Or at least be engraved with the merchants name,address and date. And maybe it's first owners name and D.O.B too. Life in the research department would be real cruisey.
Mick
-
06-01-2011, 10:05 PM #147
- Join Date
- May 2011
- Location
- Cowra, New South Wales, Australia
- Posts
- 579
Thanked: 46Yeah that would make tracing the history of these fascinating pieces much easier, now to start hunting through antique shops and deceased estates etc for further examples!
-
06-02-2011, 07:05 AM #148
I think it is true about Australia being a major market for Cadman. I've just bought one on eBay, for $10.50 Australian. The pictures don't exactly guarantee its condition, but it seems very acceptable, and that price is worth taking a chance on.
Maybe they had a family member there who did the selling, but items of information like that are so often lost. Australia was a penal colony well into the 19th century, and not everybody wanted to draw attention to a family member who made the trip.
I think the very narrow razors were probably made for people with some unusual line in noses, and the predominance of very wide wedge razors in early Victorian times was due to the commonness of moustaches. I have a picture of my grandfather in uniform and wearing spurs in 1916, and as a most matter-of-fact Wigtownshire farmer, he must be about the most unexpected person to have sported an almost imperceptibly thin Ronald Coleman/Errol Flynn moustache. The truth is, he wanted the absolute minimum of the detestable thing regulations forced him to have. I believe I can see the outline of his celluloid safety-razor case in his pocket, though.
The Cadman Bengalls should remind us that while high prices are paid for a small number of well-known makes, there are real bargains to be had in less familiar ones which are just as good.
-
06-13-2011, 02:12 AM #149
If you guys check the Wiki you'd think there should be a heap of Bengalls in Japan India & Poland too Dunno if that's the case tho.
Cadman, T. R. & Sons - Straight Razor Place WikiThe white gleam of swords, not the black ink of books, clears doubts and uncertainties and bleak outlooks.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to onimaru55 For This Useful Post:
baldy (06-14-2011)
-
06-13-2011, 06:58 AM #150
- Join Date
- May 2011
- Location
- Cowra, New South Wales, Australia
- Posts
- 579
Thanked: 46Well, even if there were finding them would be conditional on someone, somewhere bothering to keep the items. Like many antiques it comes down to pure luck finding something that, was considered SO common as to be not worth keeping past it's useful life or the life of it's owner. Fortunately for us some people did hand on to great grandfather's razor, though as I'm currently finding out, many people simply did not. Even perfectly good items were often thrown out when the old bloke passed on, only to become sought after antiques only one generation later.