I don't doubt it, since you're in the UK. By the way, Spyderco makes a slipjoint folding knife called the UK Penknife, which was designed for places where locking folders are illegal, and it has a long enough blade to be useful. Swiss Army knives are great tools, btw.I have a Swiss Army knife with a few blades and some kitchen knifes. More for practicality, but knifes are not something I would be collecting.
I don't doubt it, since you're in the UK. By the way, Spyderco makes a slipjoint folding knife called the UK Penknife, which was designed for places where locking folders are illegal, and it has a long enough blade to be useful. Swiss Army knives are great tools, btw.
I do have quite a collection of knives, although I don't actively collect them know (now I collect guitars, apparently). In fact, I have some of the same knives you show there - several of the SpyderCo, and also I have a couple of Benchmade 940.Here is my modest little collection: 3 Spydercos, 2 Benchmades, 3 Case pocketknives, an Extrema Ratio, and a Klotzli folder. What have you got?
I'm sure I saw your cousin on that show as I watched all of them. It was impressive what those guys could do in such short time.I don't collect knives or know much about them, but I do have a few interesting things to add:
- My cousin Jared is a master knife maker. In fact, he won one of the Forged in Fire competitions. Jared's Forge.
- I inherited some knives and a WWII bayonet some years ago. I threw them up on Ebay last month and was gob smacked at how much they went for. One of them was a Buck that went for $400. I had no idea knives were that kind of coin.
I'm sure I saw your cousin on that show as I watched all of them. It was impressive what those guys could do in such short time.