What "Traditional Knife" are ya totin' today?

I'm amazed at the way you love it all the time
The way you ..put it in the line
Pulled it out of time
And I understand
Maybe I'm amazed
At the way it's with you all the time
...

:D:D:thumbup:

Thanks my friend :D :thumbup: I met that feller's brother a couple of times ;)

Always good to see that rustic Beauty, Jack. :thumbup:


Today, on the trail.


Thanks Dean, what a peach! :) :thumbup:

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Impressive :thumbup:
 
More hours in the kitchen, processing stuff from the garden. I can't wait till the first frost! Getting some good patina on my Hayn Helper.

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Woah! That's a gem Ernie!

This one has been riding along since I got it at the Case store in Bradford. Nice little knife!
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Love the teardrop Gary. It's a fantastic knife profile Tony thought up to use on that one from the Quill knife. Can't go to Case without picking something up ;)

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Sent from my SM-G935V using Tapatalk

Good looking Schrade Dave, the clip blade is profile really nicely~


What a bundle of blue P, love all of your carry from today~

Today's emptied pockets.
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Lovely pair Gevo. :thumbup: Please post these more often ;)
Thank you, my friend! I just got them and am slowly cleaning them up. I want to leave all the character and retard all the rust. I was just researching the Camillus and it looks to be from around 1916. I will know more as time goes on and I get them preserved. Both have wonderful action and are a joy to handle and admire. The pile side of the Camillus is mind blowing:cool:

The stag you posted in Just a Picture is superb! Great picture too:thumbup::D
 
Great choices Jack :thumbup:




I'm office bound at present - I hate being behind a desk :(
 
Thanks Paul :thumbup: Sorry to hear that mate, hope you've got the weekend off at least :thumbup:
 
Lambsfoot aside (another beautiful one for sure), any bareheaded Buffalo horn is fantastic. I love the character to that one!

Cool pic of your Lambsfoot Greg, it's starting to get some nice character :thumbup:

Thank you, gentlemen. I've been enjoying getting to know its character and watching it evolve.

I love, love, love this old Camillus C4. Much harder to come by than the Camillus-manufactured Remington R-4. The C4 has gotten a ton of pocket time since mid-summer. The craftsmanship on the 5-blade Camillus scouts from this era is truly remarkable. No blade wobble on any blade. Perfect walk and talk. Almost zero liner gap. And even though I'm not a gun guy, I love the brass 30-06 cartridge head inlay. The tool selection on this knife is outstanding. Wood saw, fat belly spearpoint main blade, secondary large coping blade, philips screwdriver, cap lifter/flathead screwdriver and bail. The knife originally had an infamous "scalloped" coping blade (read worst serrated blade ever), but a diamond hone fixed that quickly. The extra tool layer makes the C4 supremely comfortable in the hand; even for extended use.

That's just a shadow on the coping blade. The edge is straight as an arrow.

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That's a great looking knife, Buzzbait. I'm glad you took the time to sing its praises. It's got a lot going for it! :thumbup:

Today, on the trail.


What a lovely Schrade!


I'm happy to see this lineup return my friend. It's my favorite pairing of yours. :thumbup:

Lambsfoot again for me today. I don't have a fresh picture, so I'll revisit a favorite:

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The last couple of pages is giving me flashbacks. Gevo quoting the Beatles and Swaybacksteve posting "magic" mushrooms!
Oh well, back to the real world.




Alan
 
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