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03-30-2015, 04:27 PM #1
The blade has been worked over, no doubt. Looks OK, though. My concern is that much of the perceived value is in the newly-made scales.
They look thick and clunky, heavy to me. I had rather have accurate or original horn scales, but that is just me."Don't be stubborn. You are missing out."
I rest my case.
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07-31-2015, 12:07 AM #2
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Thanked: 4207Dang, looking at that one really shows me how much was ground off the WB FBU I just BIN'd on dabay.
The lower arrow is ground off completely and the faces have been gouged up quite a bit. This one looks nice in comparison. Presume it's gone by now.
I'd probably opt for different scales as well, assuming it's fake MOP on them.
Cheers."Depression is just anger,, without the enthusiasm."
Steven Wright
https://mobro.co/michaelbolton65?mc=5
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07-31-2015, 12:53 AM #3
The blade looks OK but for a razor like that, whoever restored it should have put a bit more time into it to get a flawless mirror finish.
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JP5 (07-31-2015)
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07-31-2015, 01:40 AM #4
I dunno. I would be happy he stopped where he did, myself!
"Don't be stubborn. You are missing out."
I rest my case.
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07-31-2015, 02:50 AM #5
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Thanked: 4207I tend to agree with you Tom. Although I appreciate, and am still chasing a self made mirror finish on a vintage razor I can be proud to achieve, on these bad boys a little age and character work.
What I was appreciating was just how much detail has been previously removed from my new restore blade based on this one, and the one you recently posted which I saw before mine arrived.
My logo arrow and rear stab are ground away by some hack job on a grinder who knows how many years ago. I have no expectation of mirror finish although I am going to try. I will be happy to smooth out the damage and call it a shaver again at the least. Going to try to save the scales too, worm holes be damned."Depression is just anger,, without the enthusiasm."
Steven Wright
https://mobro.co/michaelbolton65?mc=5
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07-31-2015, 02:59 AM #6
Gee, Mike. I tend to think 'clean' these days on the old ones. A buffer finish seems false to me on them.
The ones which had a mirror finish in the old days, saving the lines, details without blowing out the tang stamps, all somehow seems impossible now? I like to make the oldies clean and tight, not much more. They seem silly as done too shiny, JMO. Of course the wedges have lots of meat on the bone!
Some of those need the blade reshaped a bit to make all well. I feel your's could benefit?
I shall start a thread on it as I begin.Last edited by sharptonn; 07-31-2015 at 03:05 AM.
"Don't be stubborn. You are missing out."
I rest my case.
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07-31-2015, 03:10 AM #7
Looks very nice, for something that is 150+ years old it's in great shape IMO. If I didn't have a 7-Day set of them already, I'd be very interested in acquiring that one.
Scales are a matter of taste as far as I'm concerned, but you don't see many of those blades come along in such a nice state.
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07-31-2015, 03:40 AM #8
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07-31-2015, 03:44 AM #9
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Thanked: 4207"Depression is just anger,, without the enthusiasm."
Steven Wright
https://mobro.co/michaelbolton65?mc=5
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07-31-2015, 03:57 AM #10