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Stephane Rabier




Location: Brittany
Joined: 13 Nov 2006

Posts: 104

PostPosted: Wed 04 Jul, 2012 2:40 am    Post subject: Id an old sharpening stone?         Reply with quote

Hi,
this morning my wife has just dropped my grandfather's sharpening stone while moving everything in the kitchen, nice day.
I was using it since I'm a kid, my grandfather for times before and I've never seen a stone half as good as this one, just magic!
The colour is a little bit more pinkish than the picture shows.
It's very hard : if I try to scratch an artificial stone with a broken saw blade, the stone is scratched but with that stone the saw blade looses half a millimeter and the stone is still intact.

As there's a lot of sharpening artists on the forum, I hope someone could help me identify that stone so I can try to find a new one.
The size is about 100x45x13mm (from the sides).
I guess that was *the* top quality sharpening stone as my grandfather was never buying cheap tools.

So what do you think : Belgian yellow coticule, Arkansas stone, Indian, Japanese?



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Michael R. Mann




Location: Germany
Joined: 26 Jun 2012

Posts: 28

PostPosted: Wed 04 Jul, 2012 4:58 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

The sharpening stone Belgian yellow coticule is also known as "Belgischer Brocken" and often combined with a layer of slate.
If I see the stone on your picture I don't think it's a coticule
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Stephane Rabier




Location: Brittany
Joined: 13 Nov 2006

Posts: 104

PostPosted: Wed 04 Jul, 2012 11:03 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Hi Michael,
thanks for your reply. I don't know if some 70-80 years ago they already used to glue their stones on a slate base or if they started doing this as the vein was going thinner and the stone more rare and expensive Wink

One thing is sure : several kind of sharpening stones (including the coticule) are supposed to make some "milk" when wet and rubbed with a blade, mine definitely doesn't! The blade will loose some visible particles, not the stone.
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