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#126852 - 04/22/15 06:05 PM Re: Got Ivory!! ** [Re: crutchtip]
thevalueman Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 02/04/08
Posts: 2840
Loc: Georgia
Crutch!!
That knife is orgasmic!!
OMG
:-)Rocky
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Rocky Whitaker
RKCC#25

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#126870 - 04/22/15 09:32 PM Re: Got Ivory!! [Re: thevalueman]
crutchtip Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 11/16/05
Posts: 2850
Rocky -

I have gone through a few in my day, and this is one I kinda wish I had held on to. Documented carried pieces from the Korean War seem to be the most difficult to find out of the "Big Three", WWII, Korea, and Viet Nam.
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#126873 - 04/22/15 09:51 PM Re: Got Ivory!! [Re: New2Randalls]
Dirty_Water Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 09/13/05
Posts: 2304
Loc: central fl.
"I've got the original order acknowledgment letter from Randall and the letter giving the ship date."


And THAT my friends is the real Provenance that counts!

---DW---
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Scott
RKS #014

HE IS RISEN!, HE IS RISEN INDEED!

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#127945 - 05/14/15 09:34 AM Re: Got Ivory!! [Re: Guido_Bitossi]
Attila Mezzini Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 05/14/15
Posts: 53
Originally Posted By: Guido_Bitossi
Some more...

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#128122 - 05/20/15 01:34 PM Re: Got Ivory!! [Re: thevalueman]
Jim459 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 11/23/09
Posts: 387
Loc: Georgia
I recently purchased a Model 12-9 Sportsman Bowie with an elephant ivory tip handle. It was described as having a walrus handle so I asked David Warther about the handle material and he made some very interesting comments. I learned facts about ivory I never knew. Here are his comments:

The type of grain as well as the colors in the ivory tell me for sure this is West African hard ivory ( WAHI ). Notice the tan on the top run of the ivory and the lace grain on the sides of the handle - clear features of WAHI. It is great stuff - when I find such tusks I set them aside for special uses on musical instruments as the material has better acoustical properties than does savannah ivory. The material is 7% heavier than savannah ivory and harder. It has a glassier look and feel to it and has a degree of translucency not found in any of the other ivories - it has a glow about it and in thinner forms, less massive form than this handle, the translucency is highly pronounced and most endearing to the soul. If you hold it very close to a very bright light ( do so briefly so no lasting heat can affect your ivory ) and compare it to other elephant handles under this condition you will see the glow and translucency I make mention of. Its features include it being less likely to crack from heat seizing.

This is an exceptional handle. If both sides show this vivid lace grain with a similar look then your handle was made from a very small tusk and the nerve runs the centerline of the handle. The WA tusks are smaller than savannah, by far, and recently it was determined to be a different specie - settling an argument that ran for millennia. I would say the tusk was only 1.5 to 2 feet long and most likely came from Liberia, West Africa. The glassy tactile nature of this type ivory caused it to be highly sought after by the Brits for their chess sets. What made it to America were from personal hunts in Liberia and sometimes Nigeria, occasionally western Congo, and often enough brought back by missionaries. The rubber plantations in WA, especially Liberia, brought the majority of the stock into the US. All of our rubber companies ( tires ) had extensive plantations there thru the 60's and 70's until the rubber plantations in SE Asia, Malaysia, etc. took the volume away. So for decades there was a flow of " rubber executive ivory " streaming in from WA with such tusks. Few, if any, were imported by the import houses here in the US as the commercial trade saw them headed to London for domestic use only - not for re-exportation - again - for the Brit's chess set companies.

The size, geometry and glassy feel of the WAHI could have caused a novice to believe he/she had a walrus tusk section and so there is a plausible explanation as to why the original owner, or subsequent owner(s) believed he/she had a walrus ivory Randall. Also, the glassy feel of the finished product is much like the glassy feel of walrus - modern walrus more so than fossil has this self-same feature. At this point I would bet good money this is WAHI. I live 50 miles from Akron, Ohio and have bought a lot of " rubber ivory " over the years from the estates of the rubber company executives that lived near this tire capital of the world. Incredible material.

The nerve is clearly seen coming out on the end so this is elephant (walrus does not have a black dot nerve) and, as mentioned, West African. It is from the tip of a small WAHI tusk.


Attachments
------Model 12-9 Ivory Tusk Tip 12.jpg

------Model 12-9 Ivory Tusk Tip 18.jpg


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Jim Gates
RKS #5815

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#128128 - 05/20/15 03:29 PM Re: Got Ivory!! [Re: Jim459]
1gunner Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 10/21/05
Posts: 634
Jim,gorgeous piece.The Warther explanation is excellent.
Tom RKCC CM-099

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#128141 - 05/20/15 07:08 PM Re: Got Ivory!! [Re: Jim459]
thevalueman Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 02/04/08
Posts: 2840
Loc: Georgia
David...
It's amazing what you(not me) can see by just what is illustrated in the photo's. It goes to show who the professional is. Also Goes to the point about why we cannot use "pre" ivory, form a true professional who knows the business.
:-)R
oh....darn beautiful knife!!
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Rocky Whitaker
RKCC#25

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#128144 - 05/20/15 08:33 PM Re: Got Ivory!! [Re: thevalueman]
szimmerman Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 03/06/07
Posts: 40
HERE'S A GREAT KNIFE, PURE SILVER HILT, SPACERS AND BUTT CAP FROM DOUG C. AND BLUE FOSSIL WALRUS CENTER.


Attachments
------BLUE FOSSIL ALL SIVER PIC 1.JPG

------BLUE FOSSIL ALL SIVER PIC 2.JPG



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#128214 - 05/22/15 03:04 PM Re: Got Ivory!! [Re: szimmerman]
Chief Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/05/05
Posts: 5414
Loc: Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Beautiful knife Jim, I haven't seen to many of the big knives with a "tip" handle.
Do you have a rough idea as to the age of the knife?
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RKCC CM-037
RKS #5154

If you put off following The LORD just remember......They don't serve breakfast in hell!

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#128221 - 05/22/15 07:11 PM Re: Got Ivory!! [Re: Chief]
Captain Chris Stanaback Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 09/14/05
Posts: 12867
Loc: Central Florida
Randall ended the practice of using tusk "tips" about 8 (or so..Scott: Help me?) years ago. Prior to that, I had used a few, as did others. Hard to say just how many were made in total?
Best, Capt. Chris
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RKCC/RKCA Founder
RKS #016
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WEBSITE: www.captstanaback.com

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