Members WalterF Posted June 9 Members Report Posted June 9 Finished a Schrade Sharpfinger sheath. Changed the design a little from the first, pretty happy with the edge work and burnish. The handles look bad cause a custom set is going on them and in the process of removing the old. Quote
Members Brokenolmarine Posted June 9 Members Report Posted June 9 Nice work on the sheath, and I can understand replacing the scales on the knife if they had gotten beaten up over the years. I have had the same knife for more than 40 years. I received it as a gift while stationed in Hawaii, after helping a friend out for several weeks... Nice little knife and was a workhorse for me for years. I keep it now because it was a gift. Good knives. I ought to make a new sheath for mine as well, just to kill time. Quote
Members DieselTech Posted June 9 Members Report Posted June 9 Nice work. It looks great. Make sure to show it after custom scales are added. Quote
PastorBob Posted June 9 Report Posted June 9 Nice job! I have a list of items I want to make for myself. Just keep getting buried in honey-do's, mowing, and other client's projects. I would like to make myself another rifle sling, a shotgun sling, and a Bible cover. Maybe one of these days. Quote In God's Grace, Pastor Bob "While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." - Romans 5:8 www.PastorBobLeather.com YouTube Channel
CFM chuck123wapati Posted June 9 CFM Report Posted June 9 Awesome work with what you have to work with. Man, get some files, nails, and bolts, and make some stamps. Elk horn looks great on those, if you can find some. Quote Worked in a prison for 30 years if I aint shiny every time I comment its no big deal, I just don't wave pompoms. “I won’t be wronged, I won’t be insulted, and I won’t be laid a hand on. I don’t do these things to other people, and I require the same from them.” THE DUKE!
Members DoogMeister Posted June 9 Members Report Posted June 9 looks nice. Show a picture of the final product after you replace the scales. Quote
Members bsshog40 Posted June 11 Members Report Posted June 11 Nice job! Looks great! I have a knife with a cheap sheath on it right now that I hope to make a new one this week for it. Quote
Members WalterF Posted June 12 Author Members Report Posted June 12 On 6/8/2025 at 11:21 PM, Brokenolmarine said: Nice work on the sheath, and I can understand replacing the scales on the knife if they had gotten beaten up over the years. I have had the same knife for more than 40 years. I received it as a gift while stationed in Hawaii, after helping a friend out for several weeks... Nice little knife and was a workhorse for me for years. I keep it now because it was a gift. Good knives. I ought to make a new sheath for mine as well, just to kill time. Thank you, I customize knives and new scales on this one to make it mine. They are pretty good knives, glad to see they are making the Generations series back in the USA, want one soon. On 6/9/2025 at 12:33 AM, DieselTech said: Nice work. It looks great. Make sure to show it after custom scales are added. Thank you, thinking of European Bog wood. Put a set on a couple Bucks that look nice. Will add tp the post when done. 13 hours ago, bsshog40 said: Nice job! Looks great! I have a knife with a cheap sheath on it right now that I hope to make a new one this week for it. Thank you, they are fun to make. On 6/9/2025 at 7:04 AM, PastorBob said: Nice job! I have a list of items I want to make for myself. Just keep getting buried in honey-do's, mowing, and other client's projects. I would like to make myself another rifle sling, a shotgun sling, and a Bible cover. Maybe one of these days. Thank you, work gets in the way of fun at times. On the farm never know what today brings, love it getting to be around God's creation all day. On 6/9/2025 at 7:08 AM, chuck123wapati said: Awesome work with what you have to work with. Man, get some files, nails, and bolts, and make some stamps. Elk horn looks great on those, if you can find some. Thank you, had the itch to do some, would love to make some stamps just finding the time. Hopefully soon will bring down my tools. Elk is beautiful have it on a custom Buck. Thinking about Bogwood, or deer antler have some of both save a little money. On 6/9/2025 at 9:56 AM, DoogMeister said: looks nice. Show a picture of the final product after you replace the scales. Thank you, will do. Quote
Members andrew8643g Posted July 9 Members Report Posted July 9 On 6/12/2025 at 10:44 AM, WalterF said: Thank you, I customize knives and new scales on this one to make it mine. They are pretty good knives, glad to see they are making the Generations series back in the USA, want one soon. Thank you, thinking of European Bog wood. Put a set on a couple Bucks that look nice. Will add tp the post when done. Thank you, they are fun to make. Thank you, work gets in the way of fun at times. On the farm never know what today brings, love it getting to be around God's creation all day. Thank you, had the itch to do some, would love to make some stamps just finding the time. Hopefully soon will bring down my tools. Elk is beautiful have it on a custom Buck. Thinking about Bogwood, or deer antler have some of both save a little money. Thank you, will do french nails. Yes i see this Quote
AEBL Posted July 9 Report Posted July 9 I just redid the scales on a knife like that in purpleheart for a friend ... nice knife, great sheath. Quote
Members WalterF Posted Sunday at 01:40 AM Author Members Report Posted Sunday at 01:40 AM On 7/9/2025 at 6:29 PM, AEBL said: I just redid the scales on a knife like that in purpleheart for a friend ... nice knife, great sheath. Sounds nice, question is the pin straight through? Ground in on one side and it didn't seem to have a head. Thank you Quote
AEBL Posted Monday at 03:08 PM Report Posted Monday at 03:08 PM I'm not sure if you were asking about the original pins or the ones I used. The pins originally looked like they were fat near the outside and skinnier near the inside. The handle I replaced was a plastic casting. If you get a file or a dremel tool, you can easily remove them. Another trick is to use a box cutter blade. Wriggle the tip in between the steel and the scale and give it several good whacks with a hammer (wear safety glasses) the box blade will shear the pin, and isn't hard enough to do (much) damage to the tang. For the replacement - if you have a band saw, cut the scales a little bit thicker than you will want them to end up being (like 1/16 to 1/8 thicker, depending on how you will be finishing it).I cut the scales a bit oversize, then glue one of them on. I drill through the tang and through the scale. Then I glue the other scale on and drill all the way through. For the pins, I got a stainless welding rod and ground it to fit the holes carefully. If you don't have a 2x72 ... that takes forever. I would really recommend German silver instead, SS welding rods are *tough*! Anyhow, handle is shaped up to 220 grit, then the pins are cut so that they go all the way through and stick out slightly on each side (I file them down so that they are cylindrical). Then I peen the pins. I don't beat them mercilessly, but I wind up tapping them pretty solidly about 200 times apiece. This mushrooms out the metal and makes sure that I don't bend the pin over, just carefully tap straight down on your anvil / block of steel / whatever. Once the pins are good and flat to the surface, I get the file out again and flatten the pins flush with the scales and do the fine sanding with a hand sanding block. I don't use my fingers and paper, because that causes the pins to stand out since they're harder than the wood. Even though I glue the scales on, the peened pins are really what holds the scale on. Also, if you use purpleheart - if you spritz the wood with acetone (nail polish remover) and leave it in the sun for a few hours ... it turns a really rich shade of purple. An old guy near me was teaching me how to re-handle things. I can share what little I know if you had more questions. However, the largest source of information on re-handling knives might be a forum like "blade forums" ... scroll down to the "Bladesmith's Q&A" section. Some of the best knife artisans in the world will answer your question, surely much better than I ever could. However, nothing teaches like hands on experience. I'm looking to refinish pocket knives and supply nice leather sheaths for them to local folks. I get to carve leather and file steel, it's the best of both worlds. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.