John - Some real eye-candy - great group of knives


I remember reading, some where, that the little press button was used by seamstresses. I have no valid account of this.wlf wrote: Seamstress, Joe? Elaborate please.
FRJ wrote:I'll give the thread a bump too.
Beautiful old knife, Mark, by the great New York Knife Co.
Here's a fine old Ulster Knife Co. NY.
Thanks for looking.
Stunning knife JoeFRJ wrote:I'll give the thread a bump too.
Beautiful old knife, Mark, by the great New York Knife Co.
Here's a fine old Ulster Knife Co. NY.
Thanks for looking.
Interesting Mark and beauty of a kniferatlesnake75 wrote:Hey Guys, Here are my thoughts about this knife & its Stamping
The question is Was the knife made by New York Knife or Walden Knife Co in Walden New York? I personally believe the knife to be made by Walden Knife Co & not NYK.
I believe the knife to be 1900s era because both blades are stamped & the fact it has "Hammered Pins" & not Spun center pins. Spun center pins are found on 20s & later era knives. 2nd good fact is "On a small knife this applies" there are extra pins on both sides of the handle,,,Again this is another clue for it being pre 20s. I dont believe its 1880s or older because the master blade has a nail nick instead of Long Pulls. The long pulls were pretty common back then even on small knives. So this leads me to HELP date the knife to approximately the 1900s era.
Now the fun part for those who enjoy this sort of thing. New York Knife Co was NOTORIOUS & it was Very Common for them to use Steel Center Pins & the outer pins "Brass". This knife has all steel pins. Last but not least is the knife is VERY BEEFY BULKY & Round feeling for its SIZE. Most NYK knives that I have had the pleasure of owning were on the more THIN side COMPARED to WALDEN knives of this size.
I hope I didnt bore you too much fellas.
Kindest Regards,
Mark
ratlesnake75 wrote: I personally believe the knife to be made by Walden Knife Co & not NYK.
Mark, if the knife were made by Walden wouldn't it be stamped as such and not New York knife? See pictures.
it has "Hammered Pins" & not Spun center pins. Spun center pins are found on 20s & later era knives.
My old knives with wooden covers do not have spun center pins. My assumption is that they were all peened and fashioned to a proper finish. I wish I knew more about this procedure.
Your other points sound valid to me.
Both companies were probably strong in 1900. New York knife being older and earlier according to Goin's.
Mark