I had my wife do a drive photo shoot of SOME of my antique folders. All are in excess of 50 years old, one is from the revolutionary war and one from the civil war. I have to apologize for the photography, the grandsons were on the way to a bath. If someone is interested after Granny Camp is over, we can do better pictures. There are Remingtons, Winchesters, Case, Honk Falls, New York CO, Hibbard Spencer and Bartlett, Keen Kutter, and others. There are some uber rare knives in here, there is a stag handle, baby muskrat knife from Remington, there is an explosives knife only built for 2 years in the late 1800's from the mining camp of Leadville, Colorado. Handles are everything from bone, ivory, MOP, Christmas tree, water fall, stag, to name a few. If you notice in the middle is a red handled Swiss Army Knife, that my 7 year old grandson got for his 7th birthday from his Grandpa and he insisted it go in with the mix. I have promised before to photograph my 9 knuckle Cole WWII dagger so I through it in as well. So here they are and if anyone wants a close up it should be available within a week.
Wow...that's a fantastic collection! I can't even begin to pick a favorite out of those, but I like the swell end jacks--especially the EOs--and the big Remington bullet shield trapper a lot. Dang there are a lot great knives there!
While the big Remington bullet trapper is nice, it is one of the most common bullet knives. To its left is a Remington Baby Bullet stag handled muskrat. It is in the top 5 rarest Remington's. I saw a mint example sell for $9,600 a few years ago. Mine is not near mint however, and am embarrassed to admit what I paid for it. The grand total with tax was $3.18. There are some rather unusual ones also. The black and orange fish tale Geo. Schrade is a handle I have never seen in any book. I call it the Halloween knife. To its immediate right is a large single blade knife with the owners name and town under clear plastic on one side and him standing beside a horse drawn farm machine on the other. The town is a small Colorado town that only existed for 10 years from 1914 till 1924. And the large Buffalo Bill knife at the top with the buffalo shield and the hideous goldstone handles are seldom seen. And any Honk Falls marked knife is seldom seen. While in my early collecting days I sought mint condition knives, I now mainly collect vintage used blades with character and history.
I've got a modern version of the Remington trapper and it's the knife that goes in my pocket when I'm hunting. I used to have an old celluloid-handled Remington stockman that was my great uncle Homer's. Uncle Homer had a farm and was fire chief of Pell City, Alabama. Unfortunately that knife, along with others, was stolen several years ago. The only one I recovered was the PAL my father carried in the Pacific theater.
Thanks for the tip about the small Remington muskrat. I'll pick up the next one I see for less than 5 bucks.
Do you think the knife with the owner's name and picture was a homemade thing or a promotional deal, or maybe put together by a traveling tinker?
In the second pic, the second knife up from the bottom left appears to be a 62 pattern Case What kind of blades does it have? I've got a couple of 6235 1/2s and a 31 1/2--clip blades of course. Great knives. The 31 1/2 in particular is a great size for a heavy user. Too bad they dropped this frame years ago, but I guess tastes change.
Sorry about all the questions--the old slipjoints are fascinating.
Old slipjoints are a passion of mine as well. They were personal items that often reflected the owners personality. The knife with the owners name was a sale gimmicks of the Ariel knife company in the late 1800's. They invented clear plastic. For a few dollars you could send in a photo and have it installed under the scales. Often a young boys first knife had his picture under the handle. Interesting enough, quite a few nude women pictures can be found. Seems this was an early porn thing. Take a picture of your wife nude, then have a knife built around it. My wife said no. The Case you asked about is a TESTED built between 1920 and 1940 and these did not have model numbers on the blades. It has a small pen blade and a modified clip main. The knife directly above that knife in an early XX from 1940 as it does not have a model number yet. Both have beautiful green bone scales. The third up I have carried for decades and has skinned and gutted countless elk, deer and antelope. Interesting the lowest knife is an early stag handled Parker that I actually killed a mule deer buck with. A strange story in itself.
Never heard of the Ariel knives, though I've seen similar knives and wondered.
I asked about the blades on the Case as the nail nick looked off and the profile didn't look like a spear--the modified clip explains that. It almost looks like the back of a wharncliffe.
Do you know if Case ever made a 62xx pattern (or the equivalent before models nos.) i.e. without the "1/2"? I've never seen one with anything other than the clip main and pen secondary. As you know the "1/2" denotes the clip blade. One with say a spear main? I could probably research that but you know a lot more about this stuff than me and may know it off the top of your head.
The 62 patterns I've got I found on the 'Bay. Two were NOS, including the big 31 1/2. I got them for less than $30 each because they're delrin. I wanted them as users anyway.
You need to get one of those nekkid knives to go along with that sexy leg knife you got...
The early Case knife you are referring is unlisted in any book I have found. It is 3 3/8" long. I always assumed the main blade was modified but I have seen one identical blade in these early Case's. It could be factory or both were modified. I am not completely sure about the 62 pattern knife you speak of. Case knife patterns usually have 4 letters. The first tells type of handle material, the second the number of blades, and the last 2 as a model number. Any 1/2 marking afterwards indicates different main blade than normal. A knife marked 6254 would be a bone handled, 2 bladed knife of the trapper pattern as an example. Many early Case 2 bladed knives had a spear point, and these usually had double cut swedges and a long pull. I really like these type of blades but they are hard to find. Case's before 1941 did not have any pattern numbers on their blades. The multi colored small knife near the center is an unknown early Case as well. I have a number of books I can reference if you have questions you can PM me. As soon as the grandkids go home I can get you some pictures of the blades.
The ladies leg knife is an early Remington for the 20's or 30's.