Titusville Cutlery Company

I'll post this here as it is another example of a Titusville Cutlery knife. I had a SFO done through them of 25 knives to honor my families maple syrup producing history. I gave away 13 of them to family and close friends who I knew would use them. The remaining 12 I offered for sale. I had red birdseye maple used for the handles, and a sheepfoot blade. And I was able to make a lot of requests that were not standard (long pull, brass pins, serialized, special tang stamp, and my wife did the custom artwork).
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I want a run of 600 Bradshaws with a maple leaf shield! Whittling/carving patterns preferred! 300 1095 and 300 cpm 154. Do it!
 
It's a promising start & most people seem more than satisfied with the knives. :thumbsup: Looking forward to future releases, I'm in agreement with btb01 btb01 about the use of the Teardrop frame with Lambfoot blade, would look a lot better Barehead in keeping with its antecedent. The shadow models show very well indeed.

Do I need more knives ? Nnn..What's Need Got To Do With It ? As the late Tina Turner would've said :D
 
Page 3??!! No, no - that can't be right!

Let's give this thread a mammoth bump!

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I saw these ones were a recently shown. These are not my main brand of collecting, but I do like the bolsterless "shadow" style, and a cotton knife in Damascus is pretty unique. Handles are ebony wood.
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Some of the Tunas I've had over the years were nail breakers. How are these old man jacks and old man norman barlows in terms of pull?
 
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