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  1. #1
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    Default Need some advice after I heard my husband cursing in the bathroom.

    He dropped his favorite razor and he is a good bit upset. I know I have come on here in the past and found some restorers to help us out. I am going to post a few pictures of the broken one. I also need to find someone who is comfortable and dependable with older blades. My husband recently inherited his grandfathers razor collection. His grandfather died 30 years ago and his gram kept these in her medicine cabinet all these years and before she died asked that he have these. So these are very sentimental to him, but they do need work. He is so hesitant to send these out but he is just not comfortable doing any work on them himself. So I need recommendations for crafters on here who are comfortable with working with these and very reliable. For my life I cannot remember who we have used in the past. It has been a while.

    So I have one ED Wusthof Solingen 1933 Tridente Standard. This has a severe chip off the tip and we understand it would need major grinding and can never be the same as it was. Not sure how much saving can be done for this one, but its his favorite. Scales and blade are in VERY good shape other than the huge massive chip.


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    He also has a GEBR.Meis Wald-Solingen Diamond King. It has a tiny chip on the end of the blade. Probably repairable. Other than that the blade and scales are in good shape.Name:  IMG_4960.jpg
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    We also have 4 of his grandfathers blades. My husband thinks most just need polishing and sharpening. All are older blades. Geneva Cutlary out of New York, A wade and butcher with a funny looking curvy bow stamp, One stamped ERN with a crown and a scimitar ( still sharper than heck I just discovered) and a W.M. Elliot and company. Name:  IMG_4945.jpg
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    So whats fixable you think? Are all these worth having worked on? Any recommendations on who to send these to?

  2. #2
    This is not my actual head. HNSB's Avatar
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    The first one needs some major work, but is salvageable by rounding from where the edge currently ends up to the spine. Pick the right restorer and you'd probably not be able to tell that any work was done.

    The second one only needs minor repair - if you don't mind a heavily muted square point, it is a simple fix. If you want the point squared, it would take more work, but is doable.

    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.

  3. #3
    The Great & Powerful Oz onimaru55's Avatar
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    As for restorer recommendations, take a look thru this list. You may even find who you used before.
    Member Services - Straight Razor Place Classifieds
    “The white gleam of swords, not the black ink of books, clears doubts and uncertainties and bleak outlooks.”

  4. #4
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    We are working through the list right now. My husband has the email of one person who did honing but said last time they didn't do restoring. Might email him anyway because things may have changed. Its been a year. I simply cannot remember who I contacted. I didn't keep emails.

    We are sitting with both laptops going working our way through posts, classifieds and reviews. Thinking we should have had some spare blades ready in case this happened. He did discover that his grandfathers old safety razor is awesome. Just the blades that gram had packed up with them when he died. My husband slipped one in and was able to get a smooth shave. It might make the waiting bearable. I don't think he could use as disposable or electric at this point.

  5. #5
    The Great & Powerful Oz onimaru55's Avatar
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    A few PM's or emails will find you someone confident in doing the repairs needed. The Tridente will likely need a seasoned hand or at least a delicate touch if the steel is very brittle.
    “The white gleam of swords, not the black ink of books, clears doubts and uncertainties and bleak outlooks.”

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