Posts: 1,731 Location: Oxford, UK
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 12:29 pm
Posts: 552 Location: San Jose, CA
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 12:32 pm
Looks excellent! I really want one now!
Posts: 11,553 Location: San Francisco
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 12:55 pm
To the future owner of this piece:
Jean, I'm jealous.
It's beautiful already.
You're very quick, Tod.
Posts: 8,310 Location: Montreal,Quebec,Canada
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 12:59 pm
OMG, that is really beautiful and exceeds my already high expectations by a factor of 10. :) :cool:
As far to grip is concerned I guess I will have to check it out as to usability with a normal point forward grip: I'm assuming that it wouldn't be impossible but not optimum.
The ice pic grip is very versatile and effective when one knows how to use it that way and not the supposedly poor grip chosen by the untrained street thug in a few " modern " knife training books I have read in the past. ( Well, the untrained do use the ice pic grip but they have no idea how best to use it )
Back to the Eared Dagger: The contrast of shape and colour of steel, brass and bone looks very rich as well as the grind lines really " popping " with the handle furniture in place. :) :cool:
Posts: 8,310 Location: Montreal,Quebec,Canada
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 1:05 pm
Nathan Robinson wrote: |
To the future owner of this piece:
Jean, I'm jealous.
It's beautiful already.
You're very quick, Tod. |
Well, I don't consider it an exclusive custom piece so if you want a closely similar one I have no objections to it although with Leo the best thing is to leave him as free as possible to make variations on the theme rather than making identical pieces that might bore him rather than inspire him. ( As I think you suggested yourself before. ;) :cool: )
If my project tempts others to give Leo more business it would certainly make me happy. :D :cool:
Posts: 5,981 Location: Birmingham, Alabama
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 1:21 pm
That's a work of art. No kidding, it's amazing in every respect--aesthetically, technically, historically....
Posts: 307 Location: Ottawa, Canada
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 1:30 pm
I've never really seen the appeal of this style of dagger.
Until now. ;)
That is a thing of beauty.
Posts: 700 Location: Bourgas, Bulgaria
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 1:38 pm
Leo - awesome piece!
Jean - I'm jealous too :lol:
Posts: 8,310 Location: Montreal,Quebec,Canada
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 1:41 pm
Craig Shackleton wrote: |
I've never really seen the appeal of this style of dagger.
Until now. ;)
That is a thing of beauty. |
I agree, I sort of decided to get one as I was mildly intrigued about them but not so interested as I waited a long time before ordering one: Leo's " making of pics " really make these daggers much more appealing as well as the final results.
And as Sean wrote, really a work of art. :)
Posts: 50
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 3:09 pm
Congratulations, Jean! I hope you love playing with it, as much as looking at it, because it really looks fun to hold!!
Will it be kept as a display piece, and subject to only infrequent handling, or do you plan to ever test it out on something? If you ever do, please, tell us about it!
It looks quite stiff.
Tod, I imagine you could answer this question. Is there ANY give to the blade at all?
I REALLY love the whole package, but the scale and tang... That is really intriguing. When the cinquedea was being discussed Tod mentioned the scales, how they often didn't match up with the tang, and I seriously debated getting things done that way, the way they are on your ear dagger here, but I chose not to and am glad and happy with my decision, but upon seeing this piece... I am actually quite fond of the tang not matching the scales. I might have to get something like this in the future. I really wonder what that would feel like after gripping it for awhile...
Tod:
That is such a beautiful piece.... I'm impressed, Sir.
Jean:
Congrats again! Wow. I'm jealous.
Posts: 1,606 Location: Chicago, Illinois
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 5:19 pm
Fantastic! I have always liked ear daggers and this one reminds me why! Congratulations Jean! Your collection gets more impressive and more eclectic from month to month it seems! Well done Tod.
Posts: 8,310 Location: Montreal,Quebec,Canada
Wed 30 Mar, 2011 7:24 pm
Ryan A. Currier wrote: |
Congratulations, Jean! I hope you love playing with it, as much as looking at it, because it really looks fun to hold!!
Will it be kept as a display piece, and subject to only infrequent handling, or do you plan to ever test it out on something? If you ever do, please, tell us about it!
. |
Well I would say that all of my collection is meant to be played with and not put under glass but I rarely have the opportunity to do serious test cutting and certainly with the more valuable pieces I tend to avoid things that might scratch a finish that is hard to restore ( An Albion type finish is easy to maintain and restore but a mirror finish is not that easy to refinish in a way that is undetectable next to the original finish unless one refinishes the entire blade to a new finish ).
I do test edges to see if they will cut a sheet of paper.
Although I don't put my swords or other weapons to serious work I do want them as theoretically as good as they can be if one needed to use them in a fight in period.
So bottom line I would say frequent handling but little actual use. ;)
Posts: 74 Location: Sweden
Thu 31 Mar, 2011 12:45 am
Absolutely stunning!
I really like these "how itīs made" threads.
/Viktor
Posts: 1,086 Location: Austin TX
Thu 31 Mar, 2011 1:04 am
Hey Tod,
What an elegant weapon...you absolutely nailed it! Would you by any chance bring it over at the Bushforge this week end? I would not mind having a closer look :)
Craig Shackleton wrote: |
I've never really seen the appeal of this style of dagger.
Until now. ;)
|
True for me as well, and that's twice now because I felt the same about that superb cinquedea sword Tod/Owen made a while ago...I guess Tod's aesthetical approach would make an eating fork appealing to me...
Cheers,
Julien
Posts: 307 Location: Ottawa, Canada
Thu 31 Mar, 2011 4:40 am
Julien M wrote: |
Craig Shackleton wrote: | I've never really seen the appeal of this style of dagger.
Until now. ;)
|
True for me as well, and that's twice now because I felt the same about that superb cinquedea sword Tod/Owen made a while ago...I guess Tod's aesthetical approach would make an eating fork appealing to me...
|
Yes, I also had the same reaction to the cinqueda; it's not a style that's ever appealed to me until I saw Tod's.
It's a lot to do with an appreciation for good craftsmanship. The artistry and skill that go into these works draws my initial interest, and makes me look at the form itself more closely. Honestly, these WIP threads contribute to that, for sure.
[Caught a grammatical error I would have missed if I wasn't forced to preview. I like the new posting system]
Posts: 2,307 Location: Croatia
Thu 31 Mar, 2011 6:45 am
Beautiful! I really like daggers and knives lately but I'm not interested in weapons I can't use and I don't know how could I test and use dagger, especially one meant to be used in armored combat. What do you guys do with your daggers (the metal ones ;) )?
Posts: 50
Thu 31 Mar, 2011 7:45 am
If it's half as nice as this one, I bet they are kept plenty busy by simply wiping drool off of them :)
But that does get me thinking... If it's stiff, well made, and feels natural in the hand, does not that well enough test the qualities of a dagger made mainly, if not solely, for thrusting?
I suggest, if you need something more visceral, finding an answer to the question I ask with impact weapons: If a wild and angry pumpkin were to attack me, what would the pumpkin look like afterward?
I've also found it quite satisfying to take sword tips to cardboard boxes, and if the type and example can sustain it, plywood. You could do the same with daggers? Take it up against different surfaces and see how it feels to pass through them.... I don't see this as completely, or at this point in history at all, necessary, but it can be fun.... And I expect with enough intent and carelessness VERY dangerous.
Do we have a finished weight on the ear dagger? =)
Posts: 1,731 Location: Oxford, UK
Thu 31 Mar, 2011 11:30 am
Posts: 113 Location: veenendaal netherlands
Thu 31 Mar, 2011 12:06 pm
great work Tod
what kind of glue do you use for the scabbard core???
Posts: 1,731 Location: Oxford, UK
Fri 01 Apr, 2011 5:20 am
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