Just flipped them again and slathered them good! :D
Attachment 237909
I am not afraid to fail! :D
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Just flipped them again and slathered them good! :D
Attachment 237909
I am not afraid to fail! :D
Razor Bondage ,,,,, :rofl2:
Attachment 237910
Interesting bit about AIC, outback.
I have learned a great deal about Carl Monkhouse, including the fact that he came to the US from Germany in the 30's as WWII was inevitable. Big salesman and self-promoter, he produced razors from San Francisco and then to New York as he teamed up with Burrell(Case family) and produced Top-flights and CMons in Ellicotteville along with lots of surgical instruments for the War efforts. He also partnered with AIC for a short while. I have not found who his grinder was, but from the early ones imported by PJM pre-war to the various American examples through the 50's, The signature is there.
His grandson and great-grandson are still in Allegheny in the cutlery business.
The later ones simply had his name upon them as he sold it to PJM, who began to make them in Germany again.
A nice AIC is somewhat rare, but every bit a Carl Monkhouse razor.
Attachment 237928Attachment 237929
Here is a CMon wedge from Allegheny;
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Mines been altered. It should look like yours Tom, but the square point must have gotten broke. Its been turned into a round point... Horrible, will have to fix it someday.
Good hard steel and workers trained from Sheffield and Solingen, put that together and you have fine cutlery from New York. Seldom simple, but work horses.
Fine examples displayed here, Enjoy.
That's harder to find for sure, and costly.