QTCut5 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 09, 2023 5:04 pm
Rookie wrote: ↑Mon Oct 09, 2023 2:08 pm
This is a neat one. 1 piece proto Boy's Knife, that never went into production. This has lightning wood handles.
Carl, I haven't commented on any of your last few knives, but that's not because they aren't worthy of adulation; they most definitely are. But there is one thing bugging me about some of them that I hope you can help me to understand: Why would your buddy Ryan Daniels have only one knife made then choose not to put it into production? Certainly I'm not the only one who believes any/all of these would be highly popular to the collector demographic and guaranteed to sell out within hours if not minutes of their release, especially given the limited numbers TV typically produces in each run.
I can't speak to what went on during the Queen era. There were a lot of factors at that time of what went into deciding production.
Since Ryan and his wife started their own business making knives (2020-present) Ryan likes to try new patterns and show them around to people in the knife industry, dealers, etc. And also take the prototype to knife shows and get feedback from knife collectors. He is actively changing production and designs based on feedback, trying to create what people are asking for.
There is also the limitation of only so much material and time for what knives can get made per year. The small operation doesn't allow for 1000 knives per month, so the focus is on a pattern that he knows the dealers will be eager to sell, and that the collectors will be eager to buy. It also needs to provide enough variety to make variations to keep the pattern exciting until the next one is available. So picking a frame you can do a jack or a barlow style, switch blade types, do a single blade or a double blade, etc. Typically there are 400-800 pieces made at a time (springs, liners, blades) which then turn into 50 piece runs over the next 6-12 months.
Sometimes a pattern is too similar to others. Maybe if a giant pattern, there isn't a way to get enough handle material in larger sizes within a short enough timeframe. Maybe a dealer requested a certain pattern, but didn't follow through with committing to take a large enough quantity. And maybe after making a few pieces it just didn't give a wow-factor that was worth the money/time/material investment that could be used elsewhere.
A good part about the way Ryan runs his operation is that there are no tooling expenses. So it is easy to run a 3 piece test-prototype and see what he thinks about it. Tweak it if necessary. Scrap the idea if necessary. The benefits of modern CAD design and laser cutting.
Carl B.