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

I have a 20 year old knife that's in great shape except for a few little scratches. I was wondering what was the best method for removing them or should I just leave it the way it is? Help please.

Views: 647

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

D ale, that must be some kind of closet you have there. These were all made by Queen? I still have alot tl learn.

@ Robert .. NO .. these were NOT made by QUEEN CUT Co. !!!!!!!!

 

I just happen to have a closet full of older fixed blades .. 'n that last pic was some I uncovered looking for QUEEN's little "Bird & Trout" fixed blade.

 

Sorry for the confusion :D ale.

Dale, you want them knives restored?

 

To Robert, those scratches are quite deep so unless you really know what you are doing (i.e good enough to fool the eye down to microscopic level) I would go with the factory suggestion that Dale gave.

It seems like simple "use" scratches from a bit too tight pivot or something like that, if you are using it I would recommend diamond spray on a cotton wad, place the sprayed cotton on a needle or a handmade needle (better because you can make the tip small enough but have a larger grip surface), add a tiny amount of pressure and run the wad through the "grooves" in that picture.

 

Something like 3-5 micron size spray should be enough, just make sure the cotton piece is small enough to not touch the surrounding area or have it "rest" on the surface above the groove.

There's a technique for that but you need some high-quality cotton with long fibers, with that you can split the fibers up (with your hands, no cutting since you want as long fibers as possible) after having applied the spray, poke a hole in the cotton with the tip and start wrapping it tighly around the needle.

And again, pay extra attention that the tip doesn't "mushroom" out and become like a stamp.

 

That will fool the eye to a certain degree but it's also a very careful process especially on soft steel.

 

I use this method myself to tidy up knives before a sale. I go a step further though by using 1 micron spray and gently stroke it over the old finish to make it look like new (it's way too small particles to harm any stamps).

 

Or you can use stone powder, I buy it bulk in 3-5kg packages, Uchigumori powder which is about 20k grit, same process basically but better finish.

Thanks Halicon, I think I am going to send it off to the factory. I saved your info on the micron spray for another project.
D ale, I emailed Miss Moore about sending them the knife and am waiting for her answer. I think this project might come out great. Thanks for everyones help. I will let you know what she has to say.

Reply to Discussion

RSS

whiteriverknives.com

Latest Activity

J.J. Smith III left a comment for Steve
14 hours ago
Profile IconSteve and Eric Johnson joined iKnife Collector
14 hours ago
john6553 left a comment for Eric Johnson
yesterday
J.J. Smith III left a comment for Eric Johnson
yesterday
Kevin D commented on dead_left_knife_guy's photo
Friday

KnifeMaker
Doug Ritter posted a discussion
Friday

Featured
dead_left_knife_guy posted a photo
Friday
Randy, HHH Knives posted a status
"Merry Christmas from all of us at HHH Custom Knives. May God Bless you and yours this holiday season and throughout the New Year!!!"
Thursday
Mike Bryant posted photos
Thursday
Mike Bryant posted a status
"I pray everyone has a Merry Christmas.   With a Blessed 2026 collecting all the knives you ever wanted!  ."
Thursday

KnifeMaker
Bill posted a status
"merry christmas !"
Thursday

Featured
dead_left_knife_guy posted a discussion
Thursday
Carl Bradshaw commented on Jan Carter's group Daniels Family Knife Brands
Thursday

Featured
dead_left_knife_guy posted a discussion
Wednesday
elbin bunnell sr replied to Jan Carter's discussion 2025 Christmas Contest!
Tuesday

KnifeMaker
Al left a comment for Al
Tuesday

© 2025   Created by Jan Carter.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service