Looking at that it's pretty clear that the stamp separates STOD and ART. What I took for kerning strangeness was intentional.
Looking at that it's pretty clear that the stamp separates STOD and ART. What I took for kerning strangeness was intentional.
This has been a great thread to read. Font families, sensitivity to weird kerning, the amazing research and knowledge of Neil Miller and Manah, what fun. I would LOVE to have a razor with a tie to Michael Faraday.
Thank you all for, again, a most enjoyable read.
I've been continuing to dig around on this, mostly because the whole story of Stodart, Faraday and the razors fascinates me. I found some more information about CSquared's razors. In his June 26th, 1820 letter to Professor M. de la Rive in Geneva, Faraday wrote:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Michael Faraday
The letter is several of the omnibus editions of Faraday's correspondence. It's in both 'The Correspondence of Michael Faraday, Vol. 5' and 'The Life and Letters of Faraday, Vol. 1'
And yes. I think it's very important to science that you carry out the follow-up and see how their razor shaves after 190 years.
Ah! And now I've dug up the most pertinent bit yet:
As near as I can tell, he had given one of the razors he and Stodart made to his father-in-law 7 years before that letter. However, I don't consider the source for the date of that gift to be particularly good.Quote:
Originally Posted by Michael Faraday
Also, most places say the razors that Faraday gave his friends were from a platinum alloy. I think that's wrong. Faraday and Stodart didn't think that the wootz/Platinum alloy was as good as the wootz/silver alloy. I think he was most likely giving friends razors made with palladium, which he thought very, very highly of. They did make 3 pounds of it.
I found another interesting bit.
In Sheffield Steel and America: A century of commercial and technological interdependence by Geoffrey Tweedale it is reported that Faraday and Stodart worked with the Sandersons (?) and Charles Pickslay for the practical parts of their experiments.
I then found some pictures of Pickslay razors, including this one with some very familiar wooden scales
Attachment 94997
So, I strongly suspect that the two Stodart/Faraday razors were made by Pickslay, which also means that they were almost certainly not made later by Stodart for commercial purposes, but are definitely artifacts of their experiments.
The picture of the Pickslay you found does have something in common with the Stodard "twins".
I do have a Pickslay in Peruvian steel, but that looks very different.
Attachment 95036
Ah, yes! I'm pretty sure those were a good deal later. In my searching, I came across a picture of a very similar blade in near-pristine condition.
Attachment 95037
All the Pickslay pictures I've posted here come from this page.