The online community of knife collectors, A Knife Family Forged in Steel
We are all proud of our "little" hobby(obsession). So who do turn to when we brag about our knives, other than those who like to brag about their knives also. Pride may be a sin, but when you have knives as nice as we do you got to share the beauty with everybody.
As I started this discussion, I had not a definite answer to my number. But off the top of my head:
Al Mar |
Benchmade |
Boker |
Buck |
Camillus |
Case |
Cattaraugus |
Colonial |
Corneta CRKT |
Dakota |
Fury |
GEC (Northfield) |
Hen & Rooster |
Imperial |
John Primble |
Kabar |
KAI (Kershaw & ZT) |
Keen Kutter |
Lone Wolf |
Mantis |
Mission Knives |
Mora |
Old Cutler |
Protech |
Queen (S&M) |
Robeson |
Rough Rider |
Schrade (USA) |
SOG |
Steel Warrior |
Spyderco |
United Cutlery (Hibben3) |
Victorinox |
Wenger |
Western |
Winchester |
Am sure there is 1 or 2 others, but I can't think of them now. I didn't list the Hardware Store knives, as they were Manufactured by one of the companies listed above.
Show your pride in your collection's diversity or lack thereof. This is just another step into learning more about each other.
Cheers,
Brad
Tags: Manufacturers, collections, list
Well Rome, that is an impressive list of makers. Thanks for taking the time to catalog and document them here.
I was just going to say "What no Sabre knives?" but Rome listed the name.
In the 1960s that brand was sold everywhere from drugstores to discount houses (new type of retailing at the time). They were cheaper than Schrade and way cheaper than Camillus or Case. A Sabre was my first EDC. The Sabre I bought was a darn good knife - wooden handles, carbon steel blade, made in Japan. Got it sharper than a razor most times.
These 1960s Sabres have absolutely no collector value whatsoever but from reading about them on various forums they carry high sentimental value for many including myself. The later Sabres turned into junk with plastic handles and wobbly blades that couldn't hold an edge, even right out of the blister pack. I found out later that this was a Ka Bar deal. They gave everyone a run for their money.
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D ale mentioned two brands he has in his collection that peaked my interest: Challenge Cutlery - Bridgeport and George Schrade Cutlery. Would sure love to see pictures of those.
You hit it right on the nail head about Sabre knives. I can remember when
I was just a small, well let's say young kid we would get to go to the Dollar
Store down the street from my fathers TV repair shop. Back then a dollar store
was really a dollar store, toy soldiers 2 bags for a $1, models 2 for $1and things
like that. And up by the cash registar set a counter top knife display case. The
knives were Sabre, made in Japan and sold for no more than a dollar a piece.
Over the years I have managed to find a few of these old knives and they all fit the
same mold, carbon steel blades, mostly jigged bone, and not a bad knife for a $1.
It would be hard now to find a inexpensive knife of the same quality.
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