Results 11 to 15 of 15
-
07-15-2010, 08:51 PM #11
Excellent find. I very rarely come across razors in antique shops and when I do it, their condition depresses me as I start to think 'if only the previous owner had put the tiniest drop of oil on his finger and spread it across the blade...it would have aged so well.'
Instead all I find are frowns worthy of the rust bucket.
-
07-16-2010, 01:02 AM #12
No cracks, original polish is present but it popped a bit more when I massaged it a bit. Don't know if it's common for ivory to warp, but this one has no warps...it's about as absolutely perfect as possible. The only scratch or imperfection is the one on the pic. This stuff is absolutely amazing...it has information that you can pick up, but no discernable exterior texture....unlike bone that has lots of texture. It's a very warm material and seems to hold ambient temperatures better than other materials.
Got any winning lotto tickets? I could use a few million $
-
The Following User Says Thank You to red96ta For This Useful Post:
eTom (07-16-2010)
-
07-17-2010, 01:52 PM #13
Lovely ivory scales, for sure. Antiqe store browsing is a favorite hobby of mine too. The only smoother scale material to the touch is genuine tortoise shell, which is extremely rare. In the little portion of the blade heel showing in the pic, does the edge have some corrosion or was it an effect of the lighting? Hope you can post some pics of the blade. Every Clauss I have honed turned out to be a good shaver-they were made from great steel. Nice find! My favorite antique store (in which I have gotten an Escher, a NOS Henckels razor, two other nice barber hones and a strop this past year) is closed for repairs until August, and I am suffering withdrawal pains because I can't browse in it on at least a weekly basis!)
-
07-21-2010, 04:07 AM #14
-
07-21-2010, 12:29 PM #15
Lucky guy! That razor is a real keeper. I have never seen a Clauss with ivory scales before. Yours has great character and fine steel.