Welcome Home...THANK YOU FOR BEING A PART OF OUR COMMUNITY

How about a thread of knives found at flea markets, estate sales, garage sale, or even pawn shops.

Only real world person to person transactions, no online purchases! 

You know an actual purchase where you actually got to touch and examine the knife before you bought it and were actually able to haggle in person over the price.

Here are two knives I landed for around $30, one is a Coleman "Collector Edition" fixed blade hunter with a burl wood maple handle and the other is a Swiss Buck Advantange.  Both came new, in the box.  I bought them at Swap-O-Rama in Alsip Illinois from a guy said he had been a distributor for Buck Knives for 13 years.  He told me the Coleman Collecotr's Edition was made in Buck's China Factory.  I don't know about that but it was sweet looking knife and razor sharp!

So what great deal did you find at flea market!

Views: 3784

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

I've been looking at photos of #78 Stockmans, and it indeed looks very much like that frame, except for the swage on the master blade, (one side only). I didn't see any of the Camillus versions with that feature, but that could just be a Sears spec thing possibly? I also found photos of a slightly smaller Craftsman Stockman, supposedly made by Schrade, but the bolsters were a slightly different shape than on this knife, (not as squared).

Here are photos of each side of the master blade:

Syd-- Easier to date your Craftsman than to tell who made it-- Your stockman has the " crown Craftsman" shield-- Introduced in 1959-1960. So your knife dates to circa-1959-60's,- As to who made it, very little is known about who made what for Craftsman--The  time frame fits into the Schrade-Walden period of Craftsman knives, although Ulster, Camillus,Imperial, and possibly even Western and Colonial made knives for them-- Records are pretty much non-existent, but my guess would be either Camillus or Schrade-Walden..

Thanks so much John, that means it is actually a little older than I thought, I probably saw these for sale at Sears in my youth. I found a photocopy of the Sears catalog online, (not dated), which showed this exact knife at a catalog price of $2.49, so that tells you something about the time frame. At that time, even though US made, it would have been considered a "cheap" knife, a step below a $5 Schrade, (we considered Schrades to be mid-priced/mid-quality knives at that time in the world), and a long way from a Buck or Case, which would have sold for around $10-$15, (and gas was less than .29 per gallon believe it or not). Ah, the good 'ol days!!. Wish I had bought a truckload of all of the above and stuck 'em in a closet....if we only knew!!

John McCain said:

Syd-- Easier to date your Craftsman than to tell who made it-- Your stockman has the " crown Craftsman" shield-- Introduced in 1959-1960. So your knife dates to circa-1959-60's,- As to who made it, very little is known about who made what for Craftsman--The  time frame fits into the Schrade-Walden period of Craftsman knives, although Ulster, Camillus,Imperial, and possibly even Western and Colonial made knives for them-- Records are pretty much non-existent, but my guess would be either Camillus or Schrade-Walden..

My latest pawn shop purchase- I paid a whopping $9.- A 1945-1960 O.V.B. knife ( Our Very Best), distributed by Hibbard, Spencer, & Bartlett, a major wholesale and retail hardware firm out of Chicago. They later became known as True Value Hardware. Anyhow, here are before & after pics of the knife after a little TLC---

Great find!! What is your "TLC" method John?

John McCain said:

My latest pawn shop purchase- I paid a whopping $9.- A 1945-1960 O.V.B. knife ( Our Very Best), distributed by Hibbard, Spencer, & Bartlett, a major wholesale and retail hardware firm out of Chicago. They later became known as True Value Hardware. Anyhow, here are before & after pics of the knife after a little TLC---

Meager swap meet finds this week, but I did come up with a 2 5/8" single blade pen knife with a "HIT USA" tang stamp for $3. I searched the web for any info on the stamp/brand, but turned up zilch. Still, for $3 it's a good find. I kinda like the tiny little brass "tip" bolsters on this one. I guess you could call this a key chain knife?

Also found an old rusty, (but whole), Imperial "Scout" knife today, also for $3, but have it soaking in a tub with aluminum foil at the moment to remove the active rust. I'll post photos of that one when it is more presentable.

Anybody ever hear of a "HIT USA" knife?

Syd-Your HIT USA knife was made by Colonial-- circa- 1950-1960's- Virtually every example of a HIT USA knife has been this same pattern with the ring attachment, although I did find one in a 2 blade-- Many of them were used as advertising knives-- One I found advertised a golf event with the date 1965-- Not worth a whole lot, but probably 4 0r 5 times what you paid-- Still a neat little knife.-- Very little info available on these HIT knives.

I wonder if Steve P @ Colonial would remember who HIT was

Thanks John, you always seem to know at least something about every knife I find, I wasn't able to find one reference to it at all. I'm not surprised though, I have seen other Colonials that resemble this knife, so that makes sense.

I also cleaned up the Imperial "Scout" I found today, but haven't got a decent photo yet, I'll have to wait for daylight and post them tomorrow. That knife cleaned up very nicely, better than I expected, and is complete including the bail, so that one was a good find for $3 too. It came out so nice I'll probably post photos of that one on the "How Do You Clean Your Knives" thread, and will describe the procedure I used. It will look good next to it's all-metal "Kamp King" twin.

As usual I owe you my thanks John.

John McCain said:

Syd-Your HIT USA knife was made by Colonial-- circa- 1950-1960's- Virtually every example of a HIT USA knife has been this same pattern with the ring attachment, although I did find one in a 2 blade-- Many of them were used as advertising knives-- One I found advertised a golf event with the date 1965-- Not worth a whole lot, but probably 4 0r 5 times what you paid-- Still a neat little knife.-- Very little info available on these HIT knives.

Syd,  you made me go looking for a similar knife I found at a church rummage sale   I bought it at the same time I bought the golf knife. I think they were the only knives at the sale.

Alas this one is devoid of any markings whatsoever -- other than the hot stamp "Souvenir of Florida"  I think I paid a $1.  Either that or I bundle it in with some shot glasses. Hard to remember.

The things you'll buy when the picking are slim!

Hi Jan. You actually know someone who worked at Colonial? It would be cool if he could enlighten us on "HIT USA". I was pleased at this knife's condition, the blade is tight, sharp, and after a bit of oil it snaps shut like it should. There are a few spots on the blade, but that's to be expected for it's age, (I have  a few "spots" too due to age). It's hangin' on my knife stump by it's chain right now, right up front.

Jan Carter said:

I wonder if Steve P @ Colonial would remember who HIT was

Reply to Discussion

RSS

White River Knives

Latest Activity

KNIFE AUCTIONS

KNIFE MAGAZINE!!!

tsaknives.com

Click to visit

© 2024   Created by Jan Carter.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service