Hi Viking,
I own an Ornen and a Raven, both bought from Nordic Arts (great service).
I thought it just worth mentioning that these knives each come with a small secondary bevel, rather than the single flat bevel of the Woodlore.
On Ragweeds site, which is brilliant by the way, he mentions that you can remove this secondary bevel by laying the blade flat on the large primary bevel and sharpening it out.
I found, however, that the angle of the primary bevel on each knife was very shallow (around 8 to 9 degrees per side on the Ornen and 11 degrees on the Raven as measured on EdgePro [Woodlore 16-17 degrees by comparison]) which meant when sharpened down to a single bevel, although extremely sharp, the edges weren't very robust at all and turned /chipped very easily.
I subsequently returned a small single secondary bevel to each knife (at 16 degrees) and found they held a shaving edge extremely well.
I went on to carve a couple of spoons out of green oak with them, only needing to strop occasionally to bring back the shaving edge.
On balance, I like both knives a lot and they have held up well after plenty of use. They have nice sharp corners on the spine for scraping and use with a fire steel and very comfortable handles for prolonged use. I would agree with Ragweed's comments regarding the relative shape of the handles and suitability for different tasks though (Ornen better for pull cuts, Raven more general use).
Just a word in defence of the Woodlore knife though: single bevel, holds a great edge and if I could only keep one knife :yikes: , that would be it.