Wow! It does look like the WS indeed.
Wow! Come on then, what ones your favourite?It’s just the pictures. It’s a completely different weight, thickness, blade, grind and handle shape from the WS and previous Woodlore iterations. Totally different looking knife.
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I see when you post them together. It looks much slimmer than my W/S.It’s just the pictures. It’s a completely different weight, thickness, blade, grind and handle shape from the WS and previous Woodlore iterations. Totally different looking knife.
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The original Alan Wood. Blade shape is near perfect and I like his chunkier palm swells and flared butts.Wow! Come on then, what ones your favourite?
It is yeah, the stock is much thicker at 5mm as well, and the distal taper makes a huge difference. Chunkier profile handles too.I see when you post them together. It looks much slimmer than my W/S.
I like his chunkier palm swells and flared butts.
Wow, impressive collection.It’s just the pictures. It’s a completely different weight, thickness, blade, grind and handle shape from the WS and previous Woodlore iterations. Totally different looking knife.
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Alan's work is still around £300. I saw him in the Sharp Show.At that time, Alan's prices were lower, and in my opinion, you got a lot more, vs Emberleaf where you paid more and got less. I don't know how the prices compare now because I haven't seen or chatted to Alan in a few years, but I saw Emberleaf's stand at the CLA Gamefair this last July and their prices were as I had expected. Fit and finish all looked good, although I didn't handle any of them.
Two things make me say Alan's knives are better. Ergonomics and the personal touch. I can also see Alan's work holding value better. Alan sculpts his handles, often by hand to get precise shapes. Emberleaf do more belt/buff type handle shapes.
I have no doubt that their knives perform, I just think Alan makes a better/nicer knife, possibly for less money. The same goes for Ben Orford, who offers comparable/better knives as a single craftsman for less money than Emberleaf.
I also have a severe aversion to sales pitches that use hype (best word I can think of for bigging up products and making claims that are hard to verify and present as fact things which are subjective at best) and Emberleaf use a lot of such language in their advertising.
It would be lovely to have that knife in AEBL. I have one in 01 one of the rare examples of splatted handle with no cracks. At least it was not cracked the last time I checked. I took it to a very hot and dry climate and now keeping in there. so thing might have change. I will check that when I go back there.If such a knife was made now, yes, no question about it. For a full flat I would go Cruwear or Magnacut, but for a Scandi, AEBL (or Sandvik equivalent) is really good.
Not that such a choice is likely to ever be required! Spyderco are very unlikely to do any more runs of either format, in any material.
Sorry, do not mean to derail discussion....
back to Woodlore.
I like my woodlore pro, to me it really is an improved woodlore.Ditto…
I am fond of my Woodlore Pro but, despite its distal taper, I still find it to be a bit of a club in use. I wish the scandi grind came closer to the handle, too - the sizeable choil is rather annoying.I like my woodlore pro, to me it really is an improved woodlore.