Thank you so much Jerry. That is a gorgeous knife! Another great example of quality in
Remington's hand craftsmanship.I truly look forward to your
Remington show and tell collection. Looking at books and catalogs are one thing of importance but to have a picture that you can expand and then use to study a knife is quit another. It is second best to having one live time in hand. IMHO it is still priceless opportunity for top notch education. Thanks again for the look see.
I am very eclectic in my knife collecting. When I started collecting knives I sought out every major antique or vintage cutlery company and tried to buy what I thought had demand and value. After about 300 knives I found my true passion...
Remington, I purchased a few older knives but my first goal was to collect the reproduction Camillus/
Remington knives from the 80's to 2001 I stopped there because I felt like Camillus was loosing their edge in production quality and when they closed in 2007 I was very sure I was done with it. My focus was changing over to the
Remington antique knife from 1920-1940. I collect everything that appeals to me that was produced by
Remington from the late 1800's to 1940. There is so much great material, craftsmanship and quality in what they produce that I can spend the rest of my life collecting and only scratch the surface. I am truly a "
Remington Man"!
Remington cutlery is my bread and butter but I do like and collect a variety of unique
Remington products. I'll show and tell more on my next days off. I have a "few" real humdingers, (IMHO) to drag out!
