
"Remington Enters Cutlery Field" - American Cutler 1921
"Remington Enters Cutlery Field" - American Cutler 1921
After posting the release of the Bullet knife as found in the American Cutler 1921 I found this article with photos on Remington in the next issue (June 1921) which describes their cutlery business in detail after it had begun in 1919 - to me it was a cool article describing the whole Remington knife making process with some great old photos... In fact you never know which of those workers may have touched and worked on your old Remingtons in your collection
... Anyway again this was a pdf but turned it into jpegs of each page - unfortunately the photos wouldn't copy into the article text so any photos from that page would be below the page text as an attachment - and hope they are good for viewing. This will have to be 2 posts in a row to get all the pages and photos included as I think the limit is 10 photos per post.. The last attachment is the end of article but about halfway or so down the page. Personally I can see now how Remington put out so many knives - lots of workers and equipment... Hope you enjoy it! Feel free to pin it to the top if all decide it is worth it....

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Lee
Lee
Re: R"Remington Enters Cutlery Field" - American Cutler 1921
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Lee
Lee
- OLDE CUTLER
- Gold Tier
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Re: "Remington Enters Cutlery Field" - American Cutler 1921
Wow, that is some interesting stuff. Thanks for making this available. The pictures of the "back in the day manufacturing" are just as good as the text.
"Sometimes even the blind chicken finds corn"
Re: "Remington Enters Cutlery Field" - American Cutler 1921
This is a great educational thread, Lee.
That the glazers used wooden shoes and pants is very telling as to the time period.
Also, I was surprised to see that after the women put a cutting edge on the blades the blades were stamped with with a
style number on the reverse tang of the master blade. After heat processing.
I really enjoyed this thread, Lee.
Good show!

That the glazers used wooden shoes and pants is very telling as to the time period.
Also, I was surprised to see that after the women put a cutting edge on the blades the blades were stamped with with a
style number on the reverse tang of the master blade. After heat processing.
I really enjoyed this thread, Lee.
Good show!
Joe
Re: "Remington Enters Cutlery Field" - American Cutler 1921
Thanks Olde Cutler and Joe
... Glad you enjoyed it - to me it is a really interesting read as it covers just about all aspects from start to finish and the photos definitely give it a visual - you can almost hear and smell knives being made
... Actually I think it makes a good read for anybody - maybe I should stick it in the "Real American Knife Lore" thread under Knife Lore
... Took me awhile to figure out how to do to post this so nice to share it wherever it will be seen but knew this subforum was right 




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Lee
Lee