Woodlore knife thoughts...

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Well, in your case... quite possibly :lmao:
Well I dunno mate, it'd be nice to think so, my point being there are not too many places you can part with upwards of £350 for a knife and know that (within reason of course) your cash is waiting for you should you want to sell...

Are the material costs of that knife worth anything close to £350, of course not, we all know that, does the very credible endorsement of Ray and the professional touch of Alan add enough value then, of course it does!
 
Snip> Well I dunno mate, it'd be nice to think so, my point being there are not too many places you can part with upwards of £350 for a knife and know that (within reason of course) your cash is waiting for you should you want to sell...


I'll let you know over the next few months.... :lmao:
 
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What a great position to be in! Mind you, a six year wait is patience indeed!

If the bank balance looks healthy, I'd go for it. Both the knife and the sheath are great pieces of kit. I still regret selling mine for not enough a few years ago but, like many here, I have 'moved on'. They are great to use and it will become a firm favourite, I'm sure.

I firmly believe that the Woodlore is designed and made to be used. I would strongly recommend that you do exactly that rather than hang on to it as some sort of object of fascination. Selling it and reaping an enormous return is, I suppose, another option but, to my mind, flies in the face of the spirit of bushcraft - but that's another discussion entirely. As an investment, it'll probably outperform any stocks, shares, ISAs, bonds or equities in its own modest way; but is that why you bought it?

Whatever choice you make - enjoy it!
 
I think that if you paid yourself £15 pounds and hour and it takes 4 hours (£60) the materials are £10 (£70) grinding belts, leather, electricity, shop rates etc another £50 thats a reasonable price of £120.

Factor in the the experience (experienced people get paid more) and you can increase the hourly rate. then consider that a knifemaker may not have work 100% of the time and anything that i have missed it is not completely unreasonable cost. if you want to pay for the craftsman then what's the problem.

My problem is that it is just a pants design lol
 
I think that if you paid yourself £15 pounds and hour and it takes 4 hours (£60) the materials are £10 (£70) grinding belts, leather, electricity, shop rates etc another £50 thats a reasonable price of £120.

Factor in the the experience (experienced people get paid more) and you can increase the hourly rate. then consider that a knifemaker may not have work 100% of the time and anything that i have missed it is not completely unreasonable cost. if you want to pay for the craftsman then what's the problem.

My problem is that it is just a pants design lol

usually you double the materials and labour cost as a minimum but hats general manufacturing to cover over heads and a small (5% ) profit

then a reseller will add on there mark up ;)


this any better :yikes::borgsmile

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ATB

Duncan
 

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