The calendar retired people use works remarkably well at the
Blade Show. There is only yesterday,
today and tomorrow. By the end of the
second day you’ve seen just about everything and plunked down your hard earned
cash, at least I hope you have. There will
be no bargains on Sunday, Day 3.
By noon Saturday Busse was down to 2 knives and 1 tomahawk. Microtech has only the knives nobody wants and many of the custom knife makers have sold all their knives.
Esnyx paid $500 to have an empty table for half the show. |
By noon Saturday Busse was down to 2 knives and 1 tomahawk. Microtech has only the knives nobody wants and many of the custom knife makers have sold all their knives.
Some manufacturers don’t sell at this show. Neither Spyderco nor CRKT sell, partially to prevent their retailers from taking it on the chin, partially to reduce the shipping problems. There are some nice discounts from vendors. It’s also a lot to pack, ship and return to the main warehouse. Benchmade does it, but then they only sell to brick and mortar stores.
Busse and empty counter by noon on day 2 |
Shipping has its own risk.
I overheard Emerson Knives ‘lost’ all their custom knives they auction
off. They just disappeared in
transit. Of course it doesn’t take much
to look at the label and read Emerson Knives Co. and Blade Show and realize
there’s a lot of easy-to-convert loot in that box.
James Knife, a relatively new company with very modern and
clean lines, reported that two of their knives disappeared during shipping.
At some point, after the 150th table, you realize
that for most knife blades (let’s exclude the art and fantasy knives) form and
function are bound into a tight circle.
There can only be so many variations of a blade. You’ll soon find yourself only noticing the
handles. Here the range of materials,
finish, shape and combinations give the artist more latitude. Don’t believe me? Entire displays are devoted to just dyed
wood. But there is a cure for this. Visit Mickey Yurco’s table. He has a table of innovative blades and
impact tools that is actually joyful to look at. He’s always one of my favorite stops.
Sandy Brady, the scrimshaw artist, had her work on
display. She had several CRKT turtles
(now discontinued) in which she replaced the original plastic shell with
scrimshaw ivory. They are just wonderful. She’s also very active in the effort to
prevent the ivory ban. It’s not that she
hates elephants, it just very little of illegally poached ivory finds its way
to our country. Most ends up in China
and other Far East countries. Banning
ivory from animals that died between 1980 and 40000BC has no impact on today’s
conservation efforts.
Micky always has a fun table! |
Sandy's wonderful artwork |
I bought a few things as did my wife. I’ll have pictures later. There is an old parable
about packing. It says lay all your
clothes and money out on the bed before packing for vacation. Leave half the clothes and double the
money. It is so true at the Blade Show. While there are few bargains, they aren’t
cheap. I purchased a handmade auto. The handle is specially laid-up carbon
fiber. The maker uses a double strength
steel coil spring for positive opening.
All the load bearing points are stainless steel imbedded in the carbon
fiber. The opening button is oversized
and requires a spring loaded safety to be retracted before it functions. Each knife is numbered with its own unique
serial number. Most of these knives are
made for two government contracts, the FBI being one. I suspect the eight he had to sell were
contract overruns and he offered a great deal.
Still they were not cheap!
The aisles were filled with people, and it seemed attendance
was up. This year the new products were
labeled ‘no photos.’ The new product
area is where companies display some of their newest products which they hope
will be award-winning world beaters. I
guess Blade got tired of having bloggers releasing images before they could.
I went to hear Murray Carter talk about sharpening
knives. He’s an interesting person. He claims to have sharpened 125,000 knives
all by hand. He uses two water stones
for basic sharpening, a course and a fine.
With these two stones using a seven step method he gets razor sharp knives. He believes that all knife blades should be thinned and the only acceptable grind is a flat grind. Grind angle? Don’t make him laugh. The best angle is the angle that works the best for your purpose. Since it only takes him a few minutes to resharpen, he’ll try one angle then another and see which works best. Sort of suggests having a pocket full of knives with different purposes written on each. He’s very pragmatic about sharpening, but he has the reputation for it.
I stopped at ZT. They make amazing factory knives. I picked up one which has both a flipper and a thumb stud. The flipper worked fine, but using the stud I couldn’t get the blade to move. Now, I don’t know why the thumb stud is present, as it doesn’t work. Maybe, at least in my imagination, there is a legal reason. “Yes, your Honor/Officer/Boss, it has a flipper that lets you open it lightning fast, but it also has a thumb stud so this knife cannot be an auto/dangerous ordinance/ballistic/forbidden by the Geneva code of ‘civilized’ warfare.”
So I asked one of the sales reps about why it doesn’t open
with the stud. He seized the knife out
of my hand, muttered some words indicating I didn’t know if my ears were bored
or punched and dug his thumb deep into the space between the stub and
frame. With a mighty effort that turned
the knuckle of his thumb white and caused me to move out of the way of the
debris that would surely result from his exploding joint, he couldn’t could get
the knife to pop open either. And with
finger speed and dexterity that would only be seen with the top tier of
prestidigitators, he managed to roll his thumb over onto the flipper and pop
the blade open. He muttered a few words
about grit and discovered something else somewhere else that needed his immediate
attention.
Murray and his elaborate sharpening system, a bucket, board, towel and a stone with two grits |
With these two stones using a seven step method he gets razor sharp knives. He believes that all knife blades should be thinned and the only acceptable grind is a flat grind. Grind angle? Don’t make him laugh. The best angle is the angle that works the best for your purpose. Since it only takes him a few minutes to resharpen, he’ll try one angle then another and see which works best. Sort of suggests having a pocket full of knives with different purposes written on each. He’s very pragmatic about sharpening, but he has the reputation for it.
I stopped at ZT. They make amazing factory knives. I picked up one which has both a flipper and a thumb stud. The flipper worked fine, but using the stud I couldn’t get the blade to move. Now, I don’t know why the thumb stud is present, as it doesn’t work. Maybe, at least in my imagination, there is a legal reason. “Yes, your Honor/Officer/Boss, it has a flipper that lets you open it lightning fast, but it also has a thumb stud so this knife cannot be an auto/dangerous ordinance/ballistic/forbidden by the Geneva code of ‘civilized’ warfare.”
ZTs! |
The knives at the Blade Show are amazing, but it’s the
interpersonal interactions that are so much fun!
Knives from Painted Horse |