Yep, the Anton Berg...I'm digging the logs that you humped out of the forest to scale that razor :D
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My first few sets of scales were pretty chunky. It took a couple of swings and a miss to get things right. The very first pair I made with a wedge and chunky wood and could not get them to close on the razor, it was just too big of a gap.
They're not to bad actually, but their uneaven and wont stand up.
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I made them from teak wood
Here are a couple of pictures of one half homemade scales that I think are really cool in their own way. Some one said OH----!
I wonder what the story behind them is????
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I wish I had a picture with me. I have a Torrey razor with one side of the scales black plastic and the other in oak. One pin looks recycle and the other I am sure was made from a nail. Necessity is the mother of invention I suppose. Someone needed it fixed and took it as far as it needed to be in order to keep things working. I will not be changing my scales any time soon and as far as I am concerned is a big part of the value in the razor.
Before and after, so to speak. The scales it came with look to be made of a broomstick.
http://images.tapatalk-cdn.com/15/12...f6d29e5664.jpg
Nothing wrong with that. They were using what they had at hand! It would be nice if you could fill the hole in with something or put something in it like some kind of small medallion or just leave 'em like they are. They have character! I like the design on the scale that wasn't homemade.