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I would take no offense if the answer is no.  I see the term thrown around a lot and I think sometimes rather loosely.

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It does occur after the purchase of the company and name by Utica. That purchase if I remember right goes back to 1952/ I would say it is older and if you hang on to it a bit longer it will be vintage!

I definitely will hang on to it.  My son got it for me at SMKW when he and his wife made a trip to Pigeon Forge.  I assume that since it commemorates the 200th anniversary of our constitution in 1987 that it was probably made in 1987 (or maybe in 1986 to have it ready to sell in 1987.)  At any rate that would make it about 26 years old.

I look at knives on ebay a lot and they throw that term vintage around rather loosely it seems to me.

Yeah, maybe it's my age, but "Vintage" to me means a knife about 1950 or older? I've seen a lot of collectors say a knife from the 1960's and 1970's is "Vintage".  Maybe sooner or later enough time will pass and those years WILL be "Vintage"? I guess "Vintage" is a  relative term?  I believe the term "Antique" means it's 100 years old or older?  

I guess in the knife world we use the term "Vintage" loosely?

Here's from the Oxford Dictionary;

Definition of vintage


noun

  • the year or place in which wine, especially wine of high quality, was produced.
  •  a wine of high quality made from the crop of a single identified district in a good year.
  •  literary wine.
  •  the harvesting of grapes for winemaking.
  •  the grapes or wine produced in a particular season.
  •  the time that something of quality was produced:rifles of various sizes and vintages


adjective

  • of, relating to, or denoting wine of high quality:vintage claret
  •  denoting something of high quality, especially something from the past or characteristic of the best period of a person’s work:a vintage Sherlock Holmes adventure


Origin:

late Middle English: alteration (influenced by vintner) of earlier vendage, from Old French vendange, from Latinvindemia (from vinum 'wine' + demere 'remove')


Vintage to me is knives older than 50 years.

Last night I found an example of using the term vintage very loosely on ebay.  A Buck 309 Companion made in 2010 was advertised as vintage!

LOL, guess it is....if you are 3 years old

I agree with the 50 year mark

Jan

What you just said really ties in with something I have been thinking about for a few days now that shows me just how old I am.  My little soon to be 20 month old grandson will think of the 1900's as that old time century just like I do about the 1800's!

I look at it like this, if it's 25-50 years old it's vintage, if it's older than 50 years it's an antique :-)

VINTAGE, like beauty, is in the eyes of the beholder just like choice for a collection are to each his own. To me Vintage means aged or old enough that it is no longer common place available for retail acquisition. Antique is often viewed to be 25 years or more.

Well for sure I am an antique

Leopold Lacrimosa said:

I look at it like this, if it's 25-50 years old it's vintage, if it's older than 50 years it's an antique :-)

If you are an antique Steve, I definitely am!  LOL

Whew....I'm still vintage....but very close to being an antique!  LOL

I do however agree that the term is thrown around very loosely on auction sites, I don't really believe something that was made in the late '90's is vintage....but close...

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