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Thread: W. Greaves & Sons 15/16
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03-19-2015, 12:13 AM #1
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03-19-2015, 03:09 AM #2
- Join Date
- Nov 2013
- Location
- The mistake by the lake
- Posts
- 126
Thanked: 18I collect Greaves and I would guess this is a regrind. B.J. Eyre only used the Greaves stamp for I think 2 years (don't quote me exactly on that) before moving on to his own. Generally i've found the razors that don't say "Sheaf Works" in the stamp are the older blades prior to them opening the sheaf works.
Here is my newest Greaves Wedge
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03-20-2015, 03:24 AM #3
OP razor is reground and rescaled. Would have looked like this originally:
Early 1800s.
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03-26-2015, 08:45 PM #4
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
- Location
- Ireland! specifically Kildare
- Posts
- 52
Thanked: 1This is probably a really stupid question, but I have a Greaves & Son Razor that is probably a regrind. Does this class as a bad thing to do, or a detriment to the blade?
I haven't had a chance to get it properly honed yet, but surely it should still shave fine?
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03-26-2015, 08:56 PM #5
- Join Date
- Dec 2011
- Location
- I'm Gonna Spend Another Fall In Philadelphia
- Posts
- 2,006
Thanked: 498Is it bad to have a razor that was a regrind? Absolutely not. That was a necessary thing to do to keep competitive with the German hollow grinds. People wanted a razor that was easy to keep honed and turned there wedges into hollow grounds. Plus I'm guessing that when the German hollow grinds came and cornered the market, the boys from Sheffield pulled every razor off there shelf that was a wedge and turned them into hollow grinds them selves, all to move the product.
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03-26-2015, 09:17 PM #6
- Join Date
- Jan 2015
- Location
- Apex NC
- Posts
- 535
Thanked: 90Your's may be a regrind, but I have one and remeber doing some research and found that Greaves did make some hollow ground baldes. Unforturnatly I do not remeber where that info is.
Last edited by rideon66; 03-27-2015 at 12:33 PM.