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Then James, does that include....smelting the steel? Creating the coke for forging? Chopping down the tree/hunting down the animal for handles?
Skinning the cow for the sheath?
Creating the pins you use?
etc etc etc. Because all of those steps are needed in making your own knife.
A smith will say I make knives and tell a stock removal guy that he's not a REAL knifemaker. Because he doesn't forge. These kinds of debates go on all the time and are a bit useless in my opinion. Different people will have different meanings put to the term custom.
There is always debate about what a "custom" knife is.
For factory knives, you can choose a particular model from their catalog, and maybe choose handles, blade finish, filework or other choices to make your "custom" knife. Of course many others may have also made those same choices from the menu.
For my knives, a custom often starts with an idea from a customer. Drawings are made and tweaked until we have a pretty good idea of what the knife will be. The customer chooses the type of steel, type of grind, blade finish, handle materials, bolsters and.or guard, filework, scrimshaw, sheath and every other detail of the knife.
Some will say a custom knife is one that is made to order for a customer. I disagree. When I make a knife for a show, to sell on my website, or just for fun, I make it to my custom specifications at the time. I consider that a custom knife.
Kit,
I know when Donnie and I had 2 XX rehandled with exotic material. We showed them to the CEO of the company who said,"you have customized these nicley". So I really like the idea that if no one else has one like it it would be a custom, but not a handmade custom
Kit,
I dont know about other companies because I have only seen GEC's process from end to end. I know that essembled by hand really does mean that. They do not assemble mechanically. I would guess a great many companies do put them in a jib
I would hope that companies that put (assembled by hand) would mean that no automated machinery was used to put them together... but all it probably means is they put the parts into a jib and then sent it into a press to put the peices together at the right tolerances.
@ Don
If you really want a dented Ferrari then yes, congrats, you have just costomized your Ferrari. You will be the only one with a size 6 boot print in the side of your Ferrari. Anything that you change on that will make it a one off, therefor it will be a custom.
We can stay on this car analogy if you want Don. You take your truck to a reputable shop, have them throw on new exhaust, a lift kit, new tires, a special paint job, and a few new speakers then they call that a custom. Why cant it be the same for knifes. What you are saying is that people like Chip Foose are not deserving of their credit as custom car artists just because they start with a stock car.
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