- Joined
- Nov 28, 2002
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CONTEST HAS ENDED AND THE WINNER IS POST NUMBER 23 - cj65.
I saw the threads about the Scagel reproductions so I figured it was time for another give away.
Your post number is your entry number for the contest. If you post more than once in this thread your first post is the entry. You have to be a Traditional forum regular so I will say at least 20 post in this forum. Next Tuesday around noon I will use a random number generator to select the winner. You get the knife and the two certificates about the wood.
Forum member Oupa took a Northwoods Scagel reproduction and reworked it. He used Lignum Vitae wood for the new scales. The kicker is that the wood actually came from the DogWood Nob workshop of William Scagel, found drying in the workshop attic.
From the document certifying the origin of the wood, "Bill lived alone with only his two beloved black labs - nothing to distract him from his focus on creating beauty - it simply pleased him to build whatever his rich imagination could conceive. Bill's life was his art. Take a moment and touch where his hands have been."
I saw the threads about the Scagel reproductions so I figured it was time for another give away.
Your post number is your entry number for the contest. If you post more than once in this thread your first post is the entry. You have to be a Traditional forum regular so I will say at least 20 post in this forum. Next Tuesday around noon I will use a random number generator to select the winner. You get the knife and the two certificates about the wood.
Forum member Oupa took a Northwoods Scagel reproduction and reworked it. He used Lignum Vitae wood for the new scales. The kicker is that the wood actually came from the DogWood Nob workshop of William Scagel, found drying in the workshop attic.
From the document certifying the origin of the wood, "Bill lived alone with only his two beloved black labs - nothing to distract him from his focus on creating beauty - it simply pleased him to build whatever his rich imagination could conceive. Bill's life was his art. Take a moment and touch where his hands have been."


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