This picture really shows off the natural color of the wood.
Ah yes, the French are gentle all right. Can one consider a guillotine a scalping knife ??Scalping knives, scalping knives, immediately the big words... A Frenchman would never scalp someone, never, they are so gentle...
I have never heard anyone talking about this kind of jokes made on the head of others by French...... or just a little and accidentally.....
As for the Englishmen, I don't know.........
Good day to you all.
A little, yes, in a way, but for long scalps...Ah yes, the French are gentle all right. Can one consider a guillotine a scalping knife ??
Not sure that the French listed them as scalping knives, but at least some English manifests did.That's how they were listed on the inventory lists. scalping knives or butcher knives.
Ah yes, the French are gentle all right. Can one consider a guillotine a scalping knife ?? [ /QUOTE]
Only for those with a full beard.
LRB and Runewolf1973 What technique do you use to age your blades? Both your blades patinas are clean and uniform. Thanks
yes the FRENCH Shure did have a fascination for heads!! didn't they?!!Ah yes, the French are gentle all right. Can one consider a guillotine a scalping knife ??
From a suggestion by one of the greats, I used a cold brown solution, then sanded it back after a few days. Years back I used Clorox bleach, but my results varied too much to suit me. Often the etching from the bleach would be too heavy or not enough, and often uneven. Most of my scalper/trade knives were finished on a 400grit slack belt and left bright, or hand sanded lengthwise with 320 grit and left bright.
I am attempting to recreate an authentic English scalper based on the following drawings. Note that the tangs on the English are NOT tapered and are rather square on the corners. The French tangs on the other hand are tapered down to a paper thin edge and are very rounded at the end. So despite other reproductions I've seen of taper-tang English scalpers, I'm going to build mine as closely to these drawings as possible. Was there just a lot of variation/overlap with these scalping knives or something? Every time I think I've done something "historically correct", I end up finding new information that tells me something different. Anyways, I'll include a photo of the blank I'm working on of an English scalper that I am building and you can see how it compares to the drawing of the original here...
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