The online community of knife collectors, A Knife Family Forged in Steel
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Howdy Rob,
Thanks for your post. I've said it before, the best thing a body can give a collector is not necessarily a collectible item, but instead something to support the collection. Good for your wife! Scrubby pads & oil are a great example. May I suggest adding an assortment of steel wool, a small can of turps, small bottle of ammonia cleanser, and some cotton rags.
Someone suggested cardboard boxes a few days ago. Not as silly as it sounds. If you have enough of any-dang-collectible, it might be worth the time to drop into a packaging store and see how far $25 would go in nice, clean, perfectly / identically sized, cardboard boxes.
And I'm slammed thru the end of the year and can't do a thing about it, so I feel it's OK to remind one & all that I make some pretty terrific gifts for knife collectors at www.home-museum.com.
Bill
Bill Harvey said:Hi Knife-Folks,
I do a web newsletter about this time of year for giving gifts to collectors. Can I ask what kind of gifts you have gotten in support of your knife collecting that really made your day? Not knives, but generic stuff that might appeal to collectors of all stripes.
And thank you all for the recent birthday felicitations.
Bill
Howdy Rob,
A whiile back I came across a GOB who fixed organs. He had a mess of quarter sawn oak he was looking to get rid of. Beautiful stuff, but quarter sawn chesnut ?!? Must be beautiful. No such thing here in Colorado, but we do have a mess of beetle killed lodge pole pine. Pretty enough I guess (blue colored !) if you like pine. (I don't.) And you don't need it more'n about 6" wide. Colorado is essentially a desert and wood has to come on a truck. Barn-wood has to come that'a way too. (Seems to me that about 40 years ago, my family got a TV from one set or other of grandparents and it had two doors. Pretty amaizing for it's day. I've seen some od these re-worked TV cabinets. (As fish bowls?) From the day cabinet making was a craft -rather'n programming a CNC machine.
Anyway, thanks for your kind words re. my humble efforts at making sawdust.
Can't make much else, (can't cut a straight line. LOL).
Dun'know what pits are, but I love 'em little cigar boxes too. Bought a mess of them -alas, innocent of cigars- from Neptune Cigars, (http://www.neptunecigar.com/), for about fi'ty cents each. Plan to addr feets (little wooden knobs) and knobs (turned brass) as openers and given them as Christmas gifts.
Bill
Sweet Jasus JJ! With your own little hands? That's some fussy-tiny work. If I can't make something with my table saw or by banging on it w/ a hammer -it ain't getting made.
its Ruth's NEGATIVE aura acting upon these misguided passages
Gerald Hines said:Dang this thread has taken a weird turn, to talking about collecting stuff.
Have to ask -and I know I'm talking to a knife guy, but truth to tell, does Mr. Dremel figure into peach pit carving? And ain't they ever loving hard -'em pits?
B
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