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That’s some nice looking stockmans wannadoto
I posted this Schrade in another thread, but found this stockman thread, so I moved it over here.
Picked this up last week from Roger, really like the pick bone! Thanks for looking and your comments.
BWT wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 3:00 pm
That’s some nice looking stockmans wannadoto
I posted this Schrade in another thread, but found this stockman thread, so I moved it over here.
Picked this up last week from Roger, really like the pick bone! Thanks for looking and your comments.
My favorite bone too Bill .
I buy roosters combs and farmers..........................................................jack knives [/b]
treefarmer wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2016 1:05 pm
I have a question! Is there a difference in the "stockman" pattern and the "cattleman" pattern? For some reason I keep thinking the stockman has the 3 blades like a Case 6375 but when a knife shows up with an awl or punch it should be called a "cattleman". The knife in the OP is probably a #49 Queen but the 2nd post is a beautiful knife with a punch. This "rang my bell" and I've been wondering about it, is there a difference or is it what the owner prefers to call it? The awl would be to repair leather, thus cowboy, cow hunter or cattle man....?
Treefarmer
A cowboy once told me that a knife without a punch blade is for goat ,sheep herders and pig farmers .
Yes the scales are celluloid. The shield has the initials R W. Nicely in graved also . The knife has been well kept and in great shape considering it came out in the western states catalog in 1931 .
treefarmer wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2016 1:05 pm
I have a question! Is there a difference in the "stockman" pattern and the "cattleman" pattern? For some reason I keep thinking the stockman has the 3 blades like a Case 6375 but when a knife shows up with an awl or punch it should be called a "cattleman". The knife in the OP is probably a #49 Queen but the 2nd post is a beautiful knife with a punch. This "rang my bell" and I've been wondering about it, is there a difference or is it what the owner prefers to call it? The awl would be to repair leather, thus cowboy, cow hunter or cattle man....?
Treefarmer
A cowboy once told me that a knife without a punch blade is for goat ,sheep herders and pig farmers .
Just a casual observation of this post that Thomasg had pulled from the past: I realized from my question back in 2016, I believe I've learned a bit more about knife patterns. Setting aside the blade comparisons between stockman and cattleman/cattle pattern, the big difference has to do with the shape of the frame. I feel confident in saying an equal end frame can be referred to as a cattle knife and a serpentine framed knife with the same blade configuration is a Stockman. Then the same equal end frame can have a bail/shackle and a can opener, and it becomes a scout/camp knife.
An interesting and sometimes confusing hobby we are in.
Treefarmer
A GUN IN THE HAND IS BETTER THAN A COP ON THE PHONE.
treefarmer wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2016 1:05 pm
I have a question! Is there a difference in the "stockman" pattern and the "cattleman" pattern? For some reason I keep thinking the stockman has the 3 blades like a Case 6375 but when a knife shows up with an awl or punch it should be called a "cattleman". The knife in the OP is probably a #49 Queen but the 2nd post is a beautiful knife with a punch. This "rang my bell" and I've been wondering about it, is there a difference or is it what the owner prefers to call it? The awl would be to repair leather, thus cowboy, cow hunter or cattle man....?
Treefarmer
A cowboy once told me that a knife without a punch blade is for goat ,sheep herders and pig farmers .
Just a casual observation of this post that Thomasg had pulled from the past: I realized from my question back in 2016, I believe I've learned a bit more about knife patterns. Setting aside the blade comparisons between stockman and cattleman/cattle pattern, the big difference has to do with the shape of the frame. I feel confident in saying an equal end frame can be referred to as a cattle knife and a serpentine framed knife with the same blade configuration is a Stockman. Then the same equal end frame can have a bail/shackle and a can opener, and it becomes a scout/camp knife.
An interesting and sometimes confusing hobby we are in.
Treefarmer
Page 323 Sargents 3rd edition
Pal stock knife
Page 325 Sargents 3rd edition
PAl cattle knife
I noticed in the pal knifes add from way back then that they used just a gender neutral descriptions (stock knife) ,(cattle knife)) .we’re they being politically correct way back then in their marketing. ? Was the word stockman used by companies to market a specific knife model or was man added to the end of stock as descriptions from the customer s lingo .you are correct treefarmer .a interesting sometimes confusing hobby we are in!
Wannadotoo wrote: ↑Fri Dec 02, 2022 1:41 am
Here's my latest project knife....I sent a vintage Queen to some folks in Michigan for beautiful custom scales
Petoskey stone!
Wannadotoo wrote: ↑Fri Dec 02, 2022 1:41 am
Here's my latest project knife....I sent a vintage Queen to some folks in Michigan for beautiful custom scales
Petoskey stone!
That is a beautiful material.
Mike
There are those who are...and those who wish they were. He himself decides.
zed6309 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 13, 2021 11:32 am
Love stockmans and are pretty much my daily carry, i picked up this lovely Imperial frontier senior stockman yesterday at a market, its still got its factory edges and looks like someone added these inlaid scrimshaw panels
IMG_20210913_104221_223.jpg
20210913_101630-01.jpeg
Wannadotoo wrote: ↑Thu Dec 08, 2022 11:07 am
Newest.....
Would you please post a picture with all three blades open.
Kid: "Wish we had time to bury them fellas."
Josey Wales: "To hell with them fellas. Buzzards got to eat, same as worms."
Clint Eastwood-The Outlaw Josey Wales