JAM Posted April 10, 2009 Report Posted April 10, 2009 That is pricey, but it seems to be very well designed for skiving. Currently I'm using English and French paring knives to do my skiving but would like to get a round knife.ed $240 Canadian was $187 US when I paid for it - that certainly made it more affordable. It would be $195 US at this morning's exchange rate - I guess it's a gamble because you don't know what the rate will be when he finishes the knife and sends the bill. Julia Quote Life is unpredictable; eat dessert first.
Members Go2Tex Posted April 10, 2009 Members Report Posted April 10, 2009 $240 Canadian was $187 US when I paid for it - that certainly made it more affordable. It would be $195 US at this morning's exchange rate - I guess it's a gamble because you don't know what the rate will be when he finishes the knife and sends the bill.Julia You could always gamble on the futures market and pay up front or an agreed upon rate in advance. Quote Brent Tubre email: BCL@ziplinkmail.com
JAM Posted April 10, 2009 Report Posted April 10, 2009 You could always gamble on the futures market and pay up front or an agreed upon rate in advance. Could. Maybe the best way to do that is go buy a draft for $240 CD and hold it until he finishes the knife - that would be the gamble, wouldn't it? Quote Life is unpredictable; eat dessert first.
esantoro Posted April 10, 2009 Report Posted April 10, 2009 $32 for an Osborne #70 or #71 or $195 for a very a unique custom knife. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm? Quote http://www.waldenbags.com http://www.waldenbags.etsy.com
JAM Posted April 10, 2009 Report Posted April 10, 2009 $32 for an Osborne #70 or #71 or $195 for a very a unique custom knife. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm? Apples to oranges - this is a different tool. The Osbornes are standard round knives - yeah, they work - round knives are what I used to use for large-area skives until I found this one. The flat back and raised handle make it more useful for very controlled skiving (and not at all usable for standard cutting). Do you need one? No. It's a specialized tool that leatherworkers have gotten by without forever because it was only recently "invented" - but I have a lot of specialized tools (like a long-necked cantle-binding trimmer and a turnback edger for tight inner corners) that are fairly new inventions, well-made, expensive, that I don't really need, but make the jobs for which they were designed easier, with better results. Being a toolaholic I don't mind the high price - collecting cool tools is a hobby in its own right and as a hobby it doesn't have to pay for itself. And - I've got an Osborne #70, and two Jeff Cooks (~$200 each), and Bill Buchman ($200), and a Weaver and a couple of antiques. I use them all - go from one to another as they dull - and they expensive ones are worth it - they sharpen up better and stay sharp longer than the $45 Osborne. I probably sound irritated here, but I'm not - I'm just defending my way-too-expensive hobby. Julia Quote Life is unpredictable; eat dessert first.
esantoro Posted April 11, 2009 Report Posted April 11, 2009 Apologies for my unintended levity. I was just trying to justify my inability to afford what would be very nice to have. Aside: I'm actually growing quite fond of these $14.95 English paring knives from Talas, which recently moved from Manhattan to Brooklyn. http://apps.webcreate.com/ecom/catalog/pro...ProductID=18112 ed Apples to oranges - this is a different tool. The Osbornes are standard round knives - yeah, they work - round knives are what I used to use for large-area skives until I found this one. The flat back and raised handle make it more useful for very controlled skiving (and not at all usable for standard cutting).Do you need one? No. It's a specialized tool that leatherworkers have gotten by without forever because it was only recently "invented" - but I have a lot of specialized tools (like a long-necked cantle-binding trimmer and a turnback edger for tight inner corners) that are fairly new inventions, well-made, expensive, that I don't really need, but make the jobs for which they were designed easier, with better results. Being a toolaholic I don't mind the high price - collecting cool tools is a hobby in its own right and as a hobby it doesn't have to pay for itself. And - I've got an Osborne #70, and two Jeff Cooks (~$200 each), and Bill Buchman ($200), and a Weaver and a couple of antiques. I use them all - go from one to another as they dull - and they expensive ones are worth it - they sharpen up better and stay sharp longer than the $45 Osborne. I probably sound irritated here, but I'm not - I'm just defending my way-too-expensive hobby. Julia Quote http://www.waldenbags.com http://www.waldenbags.etsy.com
JAM Posted April 11, 2009 Report Posted April 11, 2009 (edited) Apologies for my unintended levity. I was just trying to justify my inability to afford what would be very nice to have.Aside: I'm actually growing quite fond of these $14.95 English paring knives from Talas, which recently moved from Manhattan to Brooklyn. http://apps.webcreate.com/ecom/catalog/pro...ProductID=18112 ed Well, Ed, now you've done it. I thought I was done buying tools for awhile - but I have been looking for these very knives for some time! Thank you for finding them at a reasonable price! Edited April 11, 2009 by JAM Quote Life is unpredictable; eat dessert first.
Members DG Leather Posted April 12, 2009 Members Report Posted April 12, 2009 Denise, where are you located? I am actually close to Farmington.....I go there often...it was a shock to hear someone in my area has connection to this board Daniel Quote
Contributing Member Denise Posted April 12, 2009 Author Contributing Member Report Posted April 12, 2009 I'm actually at Valleyview, Alberta. Joe and his friend John Miller came by our place a couple years ago and John came back with this knife to show us las year. Quote
Members Tannin Posted August 30, 2014 Members Report Posted August 30, 2014 Lovely looking tool. Perhaps they could persuade somebody (Joseph Dixons, Barnsley or C.S. Osbourne perhaps) to manufacture them? I could have done with just that tool last night, as my round knife was forced to too steep of an angle (over my other hand, which was holding the leather down) when finishing skiving the welt for a small sheath (for my English paring knife). So I finished up with the smallest, red handled Mora sloyd knife (2/0) - which has proven handy for skiving small areas, I usually use the curved tip. http://www.moonrakerknives.co.uk/morawoodcarving.html (Unusually small - like a medium sized pen-knife). Quote Simple Leathercrafting
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.