I am a Dutch knife collector and content creator. Knives and related stuff are the main subject. Some of my content is published at knifecollector031.familiehakvoort.nl/
Recently I have come to faith in the one and only God. Therefore I do not have pleasure anymore in the obsessive collecting of knives. Most of my knives are for sale for this reason. I still like knives. And I still will carry and use knives and admire the craftsmanship to make a knife.
Episode by episode I will reveal my entire collection during live stream. Always on Tuesday evening 8PM (Amsterdam time).
Sooo, why are you holding the thing like it's an injured hummingbird?🤨 Show us how a human hand fits the grip! Cut something! USE THE DAMN KNIFE. It's not a collectible tea spoon. IT'S A KNIFE FOR FUCKS SAKE.
I own the following Kershaw knives : 1032 (Big skinner), 1034 (Field knife), 1035 (Heavy duty field knife/Moose Hunter), 1050 (Folding field knife), 1056 (Field knife III), 1070 (folding knife) as well; as the (Kershaw) Trooper. I am looking for and woud like to purchase the following: 1029 (Field & Stream) 1030 (Hunter), 1031 (Camp & Sream of Deer hunter knife).
The one part that stood out and I really enjoyed was you telling us in your culture how the men and women wore their Puukko's to Church, I just loved that. My kind of Church! Hallelujah! 🙏🙏@@knifecollector031thenether9
I inherited a knife from my father that is similar to that at 13:00 in your video. I remember it being in his workshop years ago and it makes sense that it dates from WW2. I had always wondered what the sheath was made from and now I know. Very interesting video - thanks
I have this model. Bone handle, clip blade, midlock, and just right for a everyday gentleman knife. Gerber multitool for working in the garden and chores. Perfect edc for me.
I have this exact knife it was a gift from my grandfather(it use to belong to him) it has never been used but doesnt have the box anymore and instead of having black leather sheeth it has a redish leather with the kershaw logo pressed in
Thank you for sharing this collection. Those are some wonderful knives. Have you ever seen the work of American blade smith William Scagel? I think some of his knives may have been influenced by these styles, but they are also quite different in a way.
Wow most beautiful Scandinavian knives, I've ever seen! I hope you don't use that steep and uneven angle on these kind of blades with that history and value. I'm talking about 21:45 That was a really steep angle, even for a chopper! You used a much different angle for the other side, I'm sure you know you have to be consistent doing exactly the same on both sides. I just made the comment for people who don't know how to properly maintain their blades!
I first got the black G10 version. I love it so much I bought one with the brown G10. I also have a Special Edition in black. Missed out on the blue and black version. The Real Steel Thor is an excellent piece. It is still among my favorite budget knives in my collection.
I have a puukko knife I bought at a pawn shop here in the states back in the early 80s. It has writing on the blade that I can’t read. Any ideas. Thanks.
Born and Raised in the Ozarks of Arkansas. It's amazing passion/collection of knives you have!! I see the influence of this style world wide. Beautiful
well if it's original/genuine, I guess its worth whatever a real collector who needs it very badly, wants to pay for it. Hard to tell, but I would not sell lower as $1000,-. These are harder to lay hands on as time passes away.
@@knifecollector031thenether9 If I can make a suggestion, I also recently acquired the SOG Pillar. Would love to see a review if you've ever come across it. Thanks!
That is stabilized would you stupid a****** what do you think it is this is not eastern Ukraine in the 1930s f*** face we stabilize our handle material here