I have two GB's that I'm very glad I bought before they became so popular and expensive. Judging from the pictures, either GB has gone to much better sheaths since then, or some of you do wonderful leatherwork.
I'm always sniffing around for vintage axe heads to refurbish and rehaft. The golden age of North America's timber industry was from about 1850 to 1950. That's when axes reached the pinnacle of design and quality, and it's been pretty much downhill since then. When an axe handle breaks, the old heads tend to be discarded in a corner of the barn or garage, and replaced with a whole new axe from the hardware store, with no regard to the difference in steel and temper. People are starting to realize that vintage axes are desirable, but I'm seeing a lot of them that have been destroyed by "sharpening" on power grindstones before being put up for sale.
Just did a quick inventory: I have two GB's, a Wetterlings, four Hults Bruk 2 1/2 pounders, a Snow and Nealley, a Kimo Bruk, and old double-bits by Stanley, Plumb, Kelley, and Collins. I'd better make sure my wife never sees them all in the same place at the same time.