Hi
I thought it might amuse you to see a few pics of a knife-handling project that nearly finished up in file 13 (and maybe it still should you decide!)
It started off with one of the drop skinner blades from the nice chaps at Brisa: https://www.brisa.fi/portal/index.p...sMod=product_info&cPath=94_52&products_id=339
I was aiming to make a maintenance-light knife for rabitting stainless blade, black canvas micarta scales, aluminium pin at the front and lanyard hole. Everything was going to plan, until I decided it needed another dummy pin in the central cutaway to balance it up. Big mistake. Unfortunately it seems my measuring wasnt up to scratch, still not sure why, and the hole finished up in completely the wrong place, so the whole thing looked dreadful.
Had I been on my own I might have stripped the scales off started again, but Spam was round and I started to idly cut out the central portion of the scales whilst chatting away. Anyway, to cut a long story short, eventually it looks like this:
So, there are two morals to this tale:
1) Measure twice, cut once (as my granddad used to say)
2) Dont give up!
Thanks for looking
Rat
I thought it might amuse you to see a few pics of a knife-handling project that nearly finished up in file 13 (and maybe it still should you decide!)
It started off with one of the drop skinner blades from the nice chaps at Brisa: https://www.brisa.fi/portal/index.p...sMod=product_info&cPath=94_52&products_id=339
I was aiming to make a maintenance-light knife for rabitting stainless blade, black canvas micarta scales, aluminium pin at the front and lanyard hole. Everything was going to plan, until I decided it needed another dummy pin in the central cutaway to balance it up. Big mistake. Unfortunately it seems my measuring wasnt up to scratch, still not sure why, and the hole finished up in completely the wrong place, so the whole thing looked dreadful.
Had I been on my own I might have stripped the scales off started again, but Spam was round and I started to idly cut out the central portion of the scales whilst chatting away. Anyway, to cut a long story short, eventually it looks like this:
So, there are two morals to this tale:
1) Measure twice, cut once (as my granddad used to say)
2) Dont give up!
Thanks for looking
Rat