Guardians of The Lambsfoot!

Work's done for the day with the help of my freshly acquired stag AC, a super generous gift from across the pond! Thank you so much Jack, I love this knife!

betRTEq.jpg
A beauty right there Barry, good on ya Jack:cool::thumbsup:
 
Work's done for the day with the help of my freshly acquired stag AC, a super generous gift from across the pond! Thank you so much Jack, I love this knife
That's a beauty Barry. Jack is good folks. :cool:

I bet the lambsfoot would have felt right at home.
Don't you know that is right.

Good Evening Guardians, Geeks, and Nerds... :D


A gift from my boys. :cool::thumbsup:
Way cool my friend. Good boys. :cool:

Indeed a regal image! Love it, Dwight!
Anothet A++ photo, Dwight!
...to go boldly go where no lamb has gone before!
Thanks buddy and a great photo! :D

Been using the rosewood lamb a lot.
BoBaf1Q.jpg
Great pic Vince. I love west Texas history, especially the Rangers and cattle kingdoms.

Preston that, my friend, is some very good stuff. :D Sigh.... :cool:


Goodnight GuardiansIMG_5445.jpeg
 
Work's done for the day with the help of my freshly acquired stag AC, a super generous gift from across the pond! Thank you so much Jack, I love this knife!

betRTEq.jpg
Grats, Barry - that's a good 'un :cool: Jack is a hand full of trump, for sure :thumbsup:

Cool! That's the shorter "Joiners Knife", correct? Have fun with that basswood.
BTW, it was @Frailer who most recently mentioned these knives in this thread.
Yep, that's the shorter Joiner Knife. Good eye :thumbsup: I asked if I could get it without Cerakote, got it - :)
Sorry for the mixup @Frailer, mucho apologies.
My memory isn't the only thing that doesn't work like it used to nowadays :rolleyes:
And thank you again for taking the time to send the PM with the info.
strop
stoop
snoop
snoot
shoot
short
shore
share
sharp

From strop to sharp takes a few steps, even with a lambsfoot. ;)
Very clever :) I gave it a try, but it was beyond me :( Well done :cool::thumbsup:

Funny how we change as we get older. :cool::thumbsup:
They say "Change is good". Still trying to figure out who "they" are ;)
Maybe the older we get, we become who we really are :confused:

@mitch4ging Thank you Dennis. That Horn Lambsfoot is gorgeous.
Good evening Guardians. A lot of fine Lambsfoot knives showing today.
View attachment 1167033
Including yours for sure - great pic :) :thumbsup:
That's a beauty Barry. Jack is good folks. :cool:
Goodnight GuardiansView attachment 1167037
Another fantastic pic. You are a very talented fellow :cool:
Thanks, boys the pie is all gone!! :p
Almost forgot the Lambsfoot content- recycled
He6eCTh.jpg
 
Last edited:
Grats, Barry - that's a good 'un :cool: Jack is a hand full of trump, for sure :thumbsup:


Yep, that's the shorter Joiner Knife. Good eye :thumbsup: I asked if I could get it without Cerakote, got it - :)
Sorry for the mixup @Frailer, mucho apologies.
My memory isn't the only thing that doesn't work like it used to nowadays :rolleyes:
And thank you again for taking the time to send the PM with the info.

Very clever :) I gave it a try, but it was beyond me :( Well done :cool::thumbsup:


They say "Change is good". Still trying to figure out who "they" are ;)
Maybe the older we get, we become who we really are :confused:


Including yours for sure - great pic :) :thumbsup:

Another fantastic pic. You are a very talented fellow :cool:

:thumbsup::cool::p
 
Hey Jack my telly has a snooze function which I can set to turn off after 30 mins or an hour.:thumbsup:

I might have to put it in your Christmas stocking then ;) :D Apologies for missing your post yesterday mate :thumbsup:

The big 'un is the largest (UK legal) slipjoint I have and is the best for when you need a large robust knife for outdoor work. :thumbsup:
It's also the perfect size for slicing pies.:cool:
qQpqqyJ.jpg

Excellent pic David, ably demonstrating the cutting power of the Big 'Un :D :thumbsup:

Keeping with the recent navigation theme I remembered I do have one old compass.
dvsHtEu.jpg

Another great photo my friend, and a nice vintage compass :) :thumbsup:

Jack Black Jack Black - Thank you Jack. Very nice image of your Dami Lamb.

Many thanks Harvey :) :thumbsup:

Sounds like the Cadillac that my ex-girlfriend had. ;):D

48353301506_e64eda3d97_h.jpg

Fantastic pic Kevin :D :thumbsup:

Got out into the yard for chores late today due to a game of golf on the links here in NC. Put the HHB through its paces today.
View attachment 1166806 View attachment 1166807








34739810704_13747cf18e_n.jpg

Fine photos of your Hartshead Barlow Bill :) :thumbsup:

DamLamb is dam fine

Thanks buddy :) :thumbsup:
 
Hola Guardians!

Super pics and Lambsfoot with Food posts lately!

Sorry, I’m catching up again, and I’ll have to make some direct comments without the multiquotes, to keep the character limit down.

Thanks to John, Greg, Preston, Dennis, Bill and Harvey for the kind words and comments on my last few posts.

Sorry if I forgot anyone.

Tasty looking sausage sandwich there, Jack. I was actually thinking of that, when I posted that Harissa recipe - a couple of blobs of Harissa would go well with it, I’m sure.

Mark @Ramrodmb , yes I think the sable brush works better than Q-tips to apply PP to bone or stag. I agree about leaving the high spots clean, for contrast. I usually use some white aluminium oxide stropping compound, or diamond paste on the leather, so it doesn’t leave any foreign coloured particles in the pores.

Vince: it’s nice to see your ‘Humble’ Lambsfoot getting centre stage with your globe in that cool pic. Somewhere, the King is looking at that sandwich and drooling...er, smiling!

David @donn - I liked that scenario of you and Jack discussing the Lambsfoot pattern in The Fat Cat in Sheffield, complete with knives laid out on the table and interested onlookers.

I have happy memories of doing the same with our Guardian-in-Chief, a couple of years ago, while enjoying a slice of their fine mushroom and ale pie and a pint of the good stuff.

Great tip on the stonefruit Christian, I love that kind of useful info.

+1 on Julia Child. She may not have wielded a Lambsfoot, but she sure knew how to maintain and sharpen a good knife, unlike some modern celebrity chefs.

paulhilborn paulhilborn - Nice paint job your Lambsfoot knife assisted you with, my friend. What is the meaning of the large gold star on the townhouse, Paul? Does it indicate a family member in the service?

Great range gear Preston, I can’t resist asking you about it, so I’ll send you a PM in a bit, my friend.

GT @5K Qs , I collected some representative samples of more pasties from the other two bakeries in my town:

TXqg0yd.jpg


One of them was a so-so frozen vegie premix again, but the last vegetable pasty, in the foreground of the pic was the best of the local ones I tried. It was made of a good assortment of real fresh vegetables with a creamy potato mash binding it all together. The pastry was the closest to a shortcrust too. It was delicious!

I started at the low end of the scale, and will gradually work my way up to the no doubt authentic Rob the Butcher’s Cornish Pasty with shortcrust!

I’ll look forward to seeing some peer reports of one of your Lambsfoot knives slicing up a Yooper Pasty, once you return from your vacation! Will you go anywhere near the town of Seney, where that Hemingway ‘trout fishing story’ is set?

More sacrifices Dennis - it’s a hard life, my friend!

The photo Jack posted recently of the Northern Monk stout with Hendersons, got me thinking...

It’s been a bit cold here lately, so I thought a Bloody Mary with the added taste of Yorkshire and chilli heat would be in order for a chilly winter evening!

I used my ol’ ebony Lambsfoot to slice up some fresh mustard habanero and some fine diced celery to go in it:

mNcJbtj.jpg


(Yes, that’s a ‘Ghost’ Bhut Jolokia pod and another mustard habanero floating in the bottle of Stoli!)
 
Last edited:
Why I Love My £30 Ebony Lambsfoot Working Knife

It’s said that one contributing factor which sustains lasting marriages and indeed any kind of long term relationship, is having lots of shared, happy memories to look back on.

Clearly, this wisdom can apply in a way to favourite knives as well.

Looking at some of the old ‘Lamb-punches’ from Rachel’s ‘Home for Wayward and Worn Out Lambsfoots’, is an instructive experience.

I often wonder at the memories that must be attached to those knives, and what it actually was, that finally led to them being retired from service. Comparing those old Lambsfoot knives to some of the ‘toothpick knives’ in my own collection, clearly they were still used for quite some time after the blade tips were sharpened well clear of the blade channel when closed.

I’d venture a guess that they were only regretfully laid aside, when they eventually got to the stage where the blade point was so proud when closed, that it continually bit the owner when in the pocket, or sliced open the fabric of their trousers. For some of them, the end of the road may have been when the nail nick was almost sharpened into.

Those worn old knives, with their untold stories, speak to another time of careful thriftiness - but surely even the most hard headed user in those days must at least have had a twinge of sentimentality for a faithful and reliable tool which they had carried and used for so long.

All of us, no doubt have knives in our collections or accumulations, quite probably far less worn but which have a similar sentiment attached to them - even though they may not be the most unique, or best crafted, or most expensive examples, or made of the rarest or finest materials.

For me, among a handful of contenders I have, the first among them is my ol’ ebony user A. Wright Lambsfoot knife.

YuR3Kdf.jpg


This is an early review of that knife, shortly after I purchased it in Sheffield in early 2017.

And some more thoughts on it, and the Lambsfoot pattern in general after nearly a years use.

Two and a half years down the track, I thought I might revisit the knife with a few notes and remarks.

Regarding durability, my feeling is that the ebony cover scales will quite possibly long outlast all the metal components of the knife. I have no concerns about handling the knife with wet hands, or the effect of seasonal weather changes, nor do I worry when the knife suffers the inevitable drops and scrapes a working knife will be subjected to.

The worst that seems to happen over time, is the hard ebony surface finish might get a little hazy, but it is immediately revived with a bit of hand buffing with fine sandpaper, and some leather with diamond stropping paste on it.

I did smooth over the handle and round off all the corners with fine sandpaper shortly after I got the knife. The handle is actually quite contoured, which I like.

The cutler who made this knife at A. Wright and Sons appears to be a different one to the maker of the Guardians knives. The Guardians knives are better in their construction and fit and finish of course (considering their higher cost, and Jack’s close specifications and guidance), but this one has its own slightly different handle and blade styling.

If anything, the ‘nickel silver’ brass bolsters are more susceptible to wear and tear than the wood scales.

But they polish up nicely too, with the same ‘spa’ treatment.

Every six months or so, I gently repeen the pivot with a light 4 oz ball peen hammer, if needed.

With normal light use, this probably would not be necessary, but I often use the knife in a tight hammer grip to cut through branches when pruning, or clearing fields of fire from a hunting hide.

The blade is ground fairly thin, and I have further thinned it out behind the edge. Initially I just set the edge at 15dps with the Sharpmaker, but over time I have removed more material by placing the blade on a handheld pocket stone, adjusting the angle until I can feel the stone is resting on the shoulder of the edge bevel, but not touching the edge apex, and progressively grinding it thinner on each side.

This ends up giving the ability to easily restore a razor keen edge in literally less than a minute, with a few swipes on the Sharpmaker rods, or a honing ceramic at 15dps, then a couple of passes on an ultrafine rod at 20dps, and a light strop on 1 micron diamond and 0.25 micron CBN loaded balsa and smoothside leather.

The rods at this setting are very close to the actual edge apex, and only need to remove a tiny amount of material to restore a clean, crisp edge.

It also makes it extremely simple to hit the apex with different abrasive grits and types, for experimental purposes.

I’d also like to say a few words about steels and Rockwell C hardness here.

These knives are in C70 steel (an AISI 1075 analogue) run at around 55 HRc (54-56 range).

These specs would perhaps be sniffed at by modern knife aficionados.

It’s worth remembering that steel production, technology and heat treatment was as much of a military arms race between Britain, France and Germany in the 17th-19th centuries as nuclear arms were between the USA and USSR in the 20th century.

The carbon level in C70 steel sits at just under what is called the eutectoid point, which is where the carbon completely saturates into solution at high temperature, and produces a very fine grain structure, when quenched and tempered correctly.

(By comparison, the 1095 in the Waynorth Lambsfoots will produce cementite with the excess carbon above ~0.78%, but the subsequent Peters cryo quench, which was not available in the ‘Golden Age’ circa 1890-1930, ensures a complete martensitic transformation.)

In short, the steel selection and hardness is actually the product of a highly evolved understanding of steel, to produce a very fine microstructure, which is tough and easily resharpenable. It is not the most wear resistant steel of course, but it will take a very thin edge, and if you can sharpen with some basic competency, it is a trivial matter to restore razor sharpness in a minute or two.

I have never experienced chipping in any of my A. Wright Lambsfoot knives.

One of the ‘secrets’ of Sheffield blade performance is highly evolved geometry. Blades I have measured, even worn ones are generally, at most 0.015” behind the edge or even thinner.

One of the concerns I had when initially starting to use the Lambsfoot pattern, was whether the tip would round off with extended use. Rehoning the knife frequently along the whole edge seems to minimise that effect.

Dylan @Pàdruig kindly made me a custom pocket slip for my trusty ebony knife. His slips are by far my favourite design, out of the many slips I have used, and commissioned from leatherworkers. They sit upright in the pocket, with their flat base, have a slim profile, and are vented at the bottom, so carbon steel knives do not accumulate moisture. Like all finely crafted leather products, they attain a lovely patina with age and use.

Together, this knife and slip pairing, and my other Lambsfoot knives have taken me to a similar place regarding traditional pocket knives, to the one I came to some time ago with my Japanese kitchen knives and hunting and game processing knives.

That is, I went through an initial period of high intensity research and knowledge saturation from as many sources as possible, as well as acquiring and using a lot of different knives and steel types, and applying various sharpening methods.

Following that period, I settled on the best tools for my purposes in the kitchen and in the field, and rarely look at kitchen or hunting knives anymore, as they will not improve on what I already have and use.

I seem to have reached a similar point, where now I purchase new pocketknives only in exceptional circumstances, as I know what works well for me, and the patterns I already have are actually ingrained in my ‘muscle memory’.

When I have the thought to use my Lambsfoot knife to cut something, I barely have to look at it before it is out of my pocket. The swayed handle ensures that it is oriented correctly in my hand by touch alone. I pinch out the blade with my right thumb and forefinger, listening for that satisfying auditory CLACK!, and apply the blade to the task at hand, with barely a conscious thought to the whole process, as if the blade is just an extension of my forefinger.

Then the blade is wiped clean and palmed shut or brushed closed against my leg, and pocketed again.

When considering a more involved cutting task, it’s also a pleasant feeling to weigh the open or closed knife in the hand like worry beads, when assessing how to approach the job.

I’ve spent many hours gardening, harvesting and peeling fruit, vegetables and fungi with this knife, whittling walking sticks, doing basic food prep and spreading condiments, opening packages, shaving tinder for campfires and a myriad of other cutting and slicing chores.

e3dM8cp.jpg


I love all my Lambsfoot knives, and have similarly used and enjoyed most of them, but if ever I leave a well worn punch or toothpick of a blade behind, laden with memories - it will most likely be this one.

3vvnmDj.jpg
 
Last edited:
Thank you. I always have a bugger of a time gettin' the Damacus to show the way I want but that one came out pretty good :rolleyes:

...

Great pic :thumbsup: No doubt about it, I'm gonna have to get a camera instead of using my cell phone. What do you use?

...

Mail Call
I think it was @WhittlinAway who put this up a while ago. Anyway, look out bass wood, here I come :)
View attachment 1166823
OG

I know what you mean OG, it can just turn out looking grey. I have to confess that I could put a lot more thought, time, and care into my pics. They are often taken quite hastily. When I go out walking, I'll take about 10 pics, while my girlfriend, with her fancy camera, is still setting up one :rolleyes: I just have a little Canon PowerShot SX620 HS, so if I get a good pic, it's mainly down to luck! :D I take a lot of pics, and delete a lot too! :rolleyes: :thumbsup:


Stunning Dwight, that 'Oil The Joints' stamp is the icing on the cake of Charlie's Lambsfoot I think :) :thumbsup:

Work's done for the day with the help of my freshly acquired stag AC, a super generous gift from across the pond! Thank you so much Jack, I love this knife!

betRTEq.jpg

Glad you like it Barry :) Don't know if you can spot it ;) :thumbsup:

05n3DDE.jpg


I bet the lambsfoot would have felt right at home.

full

That looks like a great read my friend :) :thumbsup:

Good Evening Guardians, Geeks, and Nerds... :D


A gift from my boys. :cool::thumbsup:

Cool pic John :D :) I was in a store yesterday, where they had a bank of those self-service machines. I was queuing to be served by the single human being they still employ, but I had to laugh when I heard that the robots had been programmed with the voices of Star Wars characters! :D :thumbsup:

QZX5NCOh.jpg


strop
stoop
snoop
snoot
shoot
short
shore
share
sharp


From strop to sharp takes a few steps, even with a lambsfoot. ;)

That looks like a super-sharp edge Greg, nice post my friend :) :thumbsup:

Thank you very much, Jack! It's a handy little drill, works great on leather and wood.:cool::thumbsup:

Such beauty in that stag! Great photo, Jack!:):thumbsup:

...

:D:thumbsup:
...to go boldly go where no lamb has gone before! :cool:
Sadly, recycled photo...
vYS8aZr.jpg

Sounds great Dennis :) Thank you for the kind words :) Nothing wrong with showing that great pic twice :) :thumbsup:

Been using the rosewood lamb a lot.
BoBaf1Q.jpg

Looks like another great read Vince :) :thumbsup:

Good evening Guardians, three full days at the range out of the last four( Sat, Monday and today) has left this Guardian fulfilled, but exhausted. I'll catch up as I can, but now, the not so much fun as shooting part, cleaning and caring for the firearms. I might find a few uses for the lambsfoots, but the most important will be morale boosting and encouragement as I proceed.
IMG_1260.JPG

You expecting visitors Preston?! :D That's a cool pic, I sure do miss going to the range :( :thumbsup:
 
That's a great Herbert Robinson, Chin!!!



This is my absolute favorite Lambsfoot, John! 4 7/8", with great, jigging, and a double-rattail bolster, it has a half-stop and a firm, "working" pull of 8 - 8.5! It is slightly easier to open, from fully closed, but snaps hard into working position. This is the best blade regulation IMO.View attachment 803099 View attachment 803100 View attachment 803101
View attachment 803099 View attachment 803100 View attachment 803101
I am inclined to think that this edition has just been resurrected in a recent release, and mighty glad it has. Very well done my friend.
 
I think I might have missed a few posts, might have to go back o_O



Stunning pics guys :) :thumbsup:

Almost forgot the Lambsfoot content- recycled
He6eCTh.jpg

Thanks for the tunes OG, and for that great pic :) :thumbsup:


Looking good my friend :) :thumbsup:

Tasty looking sausage sandwich there, Jack. I was actually thinking of that, when I posted that Harissa recipe - a couple of blobs of Harissa would go well with it, I’m sure.

Thanks mate, your Harissa would have gone great with it :) I actually had some 'Yorkshire Chilli and Tomato Chutney' with it, and since it's a bit limp on the heat, loaded up with some of the Secret Aardvark @btb01 gave me at Xmas :thumbsup:

David @donn - I liked that scenario of you and Jack discussing the Lambsfoot pattern in The Fat Cat in Sheffield, complete with knives laid out on the table and interested onlookers.

I have happy memories of doing the same with our Guardian-in-Chief, a couple of years ago, while enjoying a slice of their fine mushroom and ale pie and a pint of the good stuff.

You were certainly there in spirit my friend :) I was looking at some photos of you sat in The Fat Cat just the other day, but would only post one with your permission :) There was a lot of positive interest in the knives in the pub, we ended up having quite a chat with our fellow drinkers :D :thumbsup:

I collected some representative samples of more pasties from the other two bakeries in my town:

TXqg0yd.jpg

Those look very tasty Chin, and that's a great pic with your LambShank :) I'm enjoying your pastie hunt tales :) :thumbsup:

The photo Jack posted recently of the Northern Monk stout with Hendersons, got me thinking...

It’s been a bit cold here lately, so I thought a Bloody Mary with the added taste of Yorkshire and chilli heat would be in order for a chilly winter evening!

I used my ol’ ebony Lambsfoot to slice up some fresh mustard habanero and some fine diced celery to go in it:

mNcJbtj.jpg


(Yes, that’s a ‘Ghost’ Bhut Jolokia pod and another mustard habanero floating in the bottle of Stoli!)

Fantastic! You have got half the contents of my kitchen there! :D :) :thumbsup:
 
Why I Love My £30 Ebony Lambsfoot Working Knife

It’s said that one contributing factor which sustains lasting marriages and indeed any kind of long term relationship, is having lots of shared, happy memories to look back on.

Clearly, this wisdom can apply in a way to favourite knives as well.

Looking at some of the old ‘Lamb-punches’ from Rachel’s ‘Home for Wayward and Worn Out Lambsfoots’, is an instructive experience.

I often wonder at the memories that must be attached to those knives, and what it actually was, that finally led to them being retired from service. Comparing those old Lambsfoot knives to some of the ‘toothpick knives’ in my own collection, clearly they were still used for quite some time after the blade tips were sharpened well clear of the blade channel when closed.

I’d venture a guess that they were only regretfully laid aside, when they eventually got to the stage where the blade point was so proud when closed, that it continually bit the owner when in the pocket, or sliced open the fabric of their trousers. For some of them, the end of the road may have been when the nail nick was almost sharpened into.

Those worn old knives, with their untold stories, speak to another time of careful thriftiness - but surely even the most hard headed user in those days must at least have had a twinge of sentimentality for a faithful and reliable tool which they had carried and used for so long.

All of us, no doubt have knives in our collections or accumulations, quite probably far less worn, but which have a similar sentiment attached to them - even though they may not be the most unique, or best crafted, or most expensive examples, or made of the rarest or finest materials.

For me, among a handful of contenders I have, the first among them is my ol’ ebony user A. Wright Lambsfoot knife.

YuR3Kdf.jpg


This is an early review of that knife, shortly after I purchased it in Sheffield in early 2017.

And some more thoughts on it, and the Lambsfoot pattern in general after nearly a years use.

Two and a half years down the track, I thought I might revisit the knife with a few notes and remarks.

Regarding durability, my feeling is that the the ebony cover scales, will quite possibly, long outlast all the metal components of the knife. I have no concerns about handling the knife with wet hands, or the effect of seasonal weather changes, nor do I worry when the knife suffers the inevitable drops and scrapes a working knife will be subjected to.

The worst that seems to happen over time, is the ebony surface finish might get a little hazy, but it is immediately revived with a bit of hand buffing with fine sandpaper, and some leather with diamond stropping paste on it.

I did smooth over the handle and round off all the corners with fine sandpaper shortly after I got the knife. The handle is actually quite contoured, which I like.

The cutler who made this knife at A. Wright and Sons appears to be a different one to the maker of the Guardians knives. The Guardians knives are better in their construction and fit and finish of course (considering their higher cost, and Jack’s close specifications and guidance), but this one has its own slightly different handle and blade styling.

If anything, the ‘nickel silver’ brass bolsters are more susceptible to wear and tear than the wood scales.

But they polish up nicely too, with the same ‘spa’ treatment.

Every six months or so, I gently repeen the pivot with a light 4 oz ball peen hammer, if needed.

With normal light use, this probably would not be necessary, but I often use the knife in a tight hammer grip to cut through branches when pruning, or clearing fields of fire from a hunting hide.

The blade is ground fairly thin, and I have further thinned it out behind the edge. Initially I just set the edge at 15dps with the Sharpmaker, but over time I have removed more material by placing the blade on a handheld pocket stone, adjusting the angle until I can feel the stone is resting on the shoulder of the edge bevel, but not touching the edge apex, and progressively grinding it thinner it on each side.

This ends up giving the ability to simply restore a razor keen edge in literally less than a minute, with a few swipes on the Sharpmaker rods, or a honing ceramic at 15dps, then a couple of passes on an ultrafine rod at 20dps, and a light strop on 1 micron and 0.25 micron loaded balsa and smoothside leather.

The rods at this setting are very close to the actual edge apex, and only need to remove a tiny amount of material to achieve a clean edge.

It also makes it extremely simple to hit the apex with different abrasive grits and types, for experimental purposes.

I’d also like to say a few words about steels and Rockwell C hardness here.

These knives are in C70 steel (an AISI 1075 analogue) run at around 55 HRc (54-56 range).

These specs would perhaps be sniffed at by modern knife aficionados.

It’s worth remembering that steel production, technology and heat treatment was as much of a military arms race between Britain, France and Germany in the 17th-19th centuries as nuclear arms were between the USA and USSR in the 20th century.

The carbon level in C70 steel sits at just under what is called the eutectoid point, which is where the carbon completely saturates into solution at high temperature, and produces a very fine grain structure, when quenched and tempered correctly.

(By comparison, the 1095 in the Waynorth Lambsfoots will produce cementite with the excess carbon above ~0.78%, but the subsequent Peters cryo quench, which was not available in the ‘Golden Age’, circa 1890-1930, ensures a complete martensitic transformation.)

In short, the steel selection and hardness is actually the product of a highly evolved understanding of steel, to produce a very fine microstructure, which is tough and easily resharpenable. It is not the most wear resistant steel, of course but it will take a very thin edge, and if you can sharpen with some basic competency, it is a trivial matter to restore razor sharpness in a minute or two.

I have never experienced chipping in any of my A. Wright Lambsfoot knives.

One of the ‘secrets’ of Sheffield blade performance is highly evolved geometry. Blades I have measured, even worn ones are generally 0.015” behind the edge or even thinner.

One of the concerns I had when initially starting to use the Lambsfoot pattern, was whether the tip would round off with extended use. Rehoning the knife frequently along the whole edge seems to minimise that effect.

Dylan @Pàdruig kindly made me a custom pocket slip for my trusty ebony knife. His slips are by far my favourite design, out of the many slips I have used, and commissioned from leatherworkers. They sit upright in the pocket, with their flat base, have a slim profile, and are vented at the bottom, so carbon steel knives do not accumulate moisture. Like all finely crafted leather products, they attain a lovely patina with age and use.

Together, this knife and slip pairing, and my other Lambsfoot knives have taken me to a similar place regarding traditional pocket knives, to the one I came to some time ago with my Japanese kitchen knives and hunting and game processing knives.

That is, I went through an initial period of high intensity research and knowledge saturation from as many sources as possible, as well as acquiring and using a lot of different knives and steel types, and sharpening methods.

Following that period, I settled on the best tools for my purposes in the kitchen and in the field, and rarely look at kitchen or hunting knives anymore, as they will not improve on what I already have and use.

I seem to have reached a similar point where now I purchase new pocketknives only in exceptional circumstances, as I know what works well for me, and the patterns I already have are actually ingrained in my ‘muscle memory’.

When I have the thought to use my Lambsfoot knife to cut something, I barely have to look at it before it is out of my pocket. The swayed handle ensures that it is oriented correctly in my hand by touch alone. I pinch out the blade with my right thumb and forefinger, listening for that satisfying auditory CLACK!, and apply the blade to the task at hand, with barely a conscious thought to the whole process, as if the blade is just an extension of my forefinger.

Then the blade is wiped and palmed shut or brushed closed against my leg, and pocketed again.

When considering a more involved cutting task, it’s also a pleasant feeling to weigh the open or closed knife in the hand like worry beads, when reflecting on how to approach the job.

I’ve spent many hours gardening, harvesting and peeling fruit, vegetables and fungi with this knife, whittling walking sticks, doing basic food prep and spreading condiments, opening packages, shaving tinder for campfires and a myriad of other cutting and slicing chores.

e3dM8cp.jpg


I love all my Lambsfoot knives, and have similarly used and enjoyed most of them, but if ever I leave a well worn punch or toothpick of a blade behind, laden with memories - of all my knives it will most likely be this one.

3vvnmDj.jpg

Scholarly post my friend, simply superb, and well worth savouring more than once I think :) :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup:
 
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