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There are no other markings on any of the other blades?? A closer photo of the blade with JC might help-I thought I detected a " I Y " in front of the JC -A closer photo of the blade will be a big help- I will try to help, but JC is little to go on- For example, JC Whitney ( the auto parts kings) have current knives for sale and have had them made for them in the past !!
Hi John,
I bought it in France in 2000, here is the best pic of the mark I seem to be able to get with my phone, looks like "sr J.C" sorry my real camera is on loan till the 20th. All tangs are blank. I emailed this french company that seems like they make this exact style of "6 piece" knife and I hope they speak english! the site is all in French. http://www.douris-chastel.com/rubrique.php?id_rubrique=6
Closest I could find is a very similar (including the dot between the J and the C) belonging to Jean Casamajou or Cazamajou. French in origin. Dates in early 1800's. Napoleanic swords. Seems a bit unlikely but might be worth following up on. Good luck!
Found this knife from a informed collector of French knives-He didn't have a maker either but said it was circa 1920-1930.Notice the similarity in the double ring on the pin by the main blade. I also took a hard look at the "J" in the J.C.My thought is that the "J" is actually an " O" with part of the "O" worn off over time. Look closely, and I think you might agree- Just my 2 cents worth-Hope it helps
Hey John, thanks for jogging my memory! We have a member Le Coutographe, he has a french site and he does knives also. http://dytic.over-blog.com/
He has a link to us on his page, great guy and may be able to help with maker
John McCain said:
Found this knife from a informed collector of French knives-He didn't have a maker either but said it was circa 1920-1930.Notice the similarity in the double ring on the pin by the main blade. I also took a hard look at the "J" in the J.C.My thought is that the "J" is actually an " O" with part of the "O" worn off over time. Look closely, and I think you might agree- Just my 2 cents worth-Hope it helps
Thanks it looks alot like mine, I agree. I'll keep digging!
Jan Carter said:
Hey John, thanks for jogging my memory! We have a member Le Coutographe, he has a french site and he does knives also. http://dytic.over-blog.com/
He has a link to us on his page, great guy and may be able to help with maker
Thanks Jan, all leads appreciated.
Data (C Thomas) said:
Closest I could find is a very similar (including the dot between the J and the C) belonging to Jean Casamajou or Cazamajou. French in origin. Dates in early 1800's. Napoleanic swords. Seems a bit unlikely but might be worth following up on. Good luck!
So Amazing, thanks for the lead.
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