Shumate Cutlery Corp. TungSteel "No850" St. Louis MO USA 5/8+inch Extra Hollow Ground (and Smiling from the factory) Before: After: Up close, it looks like it was just taken out of the box, new.
"Falcon" #1072 13/16+ inches Extra Hollow Ground. Bellied. Made in Germany. Very ratty, with much corrosion and chipping along the edge. Before: After: A lot of sanding, and grinding of the blade, to get the chips out. It now awaits the Hones.
C.V.Heljestrand B.K. No.41 Eskilstuna 11/16th Near Wedge Before. Bad pitting, all over. The edge was very Chippy too. After: A lot of sanding and polishing. The pitting is extensive, so I decided to take it to a certain point. I also had to take out the chippy edge. I didn't lose any noticeable width. It will now be honed, today, or tomorrow.
A CVH without the word Sweden on it. I suspect that it may be from the first year of CVH, but I don't really know. (edit) I meant to say first year of MK. CVH is much older than that.
Interesting. I wasn't aware of that. That would put it at what year, around?? I am pretty clueless about Swedish razors. @lottenhem should know a lot about them.
I meant to say I suspect the first year of the MK series. Heljestrand is much older than that. MK started about 1925, 1926 according to @Polarbeard. This is where I got that idea: https://www.cambridge.org/core/book...rks-act-1926/333CB418A4C904E11EF0B9058EC5CB97 "For much of the period covered in previous chapters, British law on the indications of origin was governed by the Merchandise Marks Act 1887. This act provided specific conditions under which imports had to provide an indication of origin; otherwise they could be imported 'blank'. The Merchandise Marks Act, 1926, ensured that products could no longer be imported 'blank': ..."
The MK series started when MK bought Heljestrand. I would expect that the BK series started at about the same time.
Wadsworth & Son "XLNT" 6/8th+ Full Hollow Germany Before: After: About 10 minutes on the Bench Mounted Buffer.
I had been looking for a small set of scales to fit the E.A. Berg, and came across a broken Heljestrand MK30 blade in a very nice set of scales… Worked out pretty well. 2nd set of ivory pinned this weekend… time for a whiskey.
Took the opportunity to repurpose the broken Heljestrand MK32 scales: With shortening, I was limited but I had this Joseph Elliott that was in black plastic that didn’t fit. Not a bad combo. And while the tools were out, pinned a set of ivory onto an ERN I have had for a while: Enjoy your projects. Tom
Well done Tom! I am a little worried that I shall split the Ivory if I should try to pinn. I must practice on some not that fancy stuff first.. Skickat från min iPhone med Tapatalk