To paraphrase what you wrote elsewhere, when one makes a very accurate repro of something, all the good things and faults of the original product are repeated.
Very much agree original knives like this often did not have the void filled with cutler's resin, though some did.
However, it is also true that it is much more difficult to keep or clean blood, gore and bits of flesh out of that area when used for hunting and butchering.
While it is my personal preference only, I don't want a knife that might wind up infecting or poisoning me when a period solution is available to preclude this from happening by filling that area with cutler's resin.
Please don't take this as personal criticism of you, but rather pointing out another problem with the period design.
BTW, I really like the other knives you posted as well.
Gus
Yah, these period knives just really weren't designed all that well IMO. Then again, I suppose they were still better in many ways than the stone alternative they had back then. I agree that getting blood and flesh and bacteria in the void does pose a potential risk. Interesting that back in those days getting infections or food poisoning would have been a really bad thing, but they probably had no idea that the knife handle design itself was of concern. I think pretty much everything was risky back then, lol, so this was of little concern in the grand scheme of things.
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