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Great information, all these years on dagger forums and over 30 years collecting army daggers and finally a decent explanation and insight, into the process of glass grip manufacture.
I have tried many times to find answers to my own question, so thank you both for such a knowledgeable and informative response. Sorry to hijack your thread Danny, but at least now you can see why finding that Eickhorn totally intact is a real gem .
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05-20-2014 11:47 PM
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Not a hijack at all Jon....some exploration..and truth came out of it. Almost like unearthing the Terracotta Warriors in small increments. Great job Gents
Might lead to a separate thread eventually
It is not the size of a Collection in History that matters......Its the size of your Passion for it!!
- Larry C
One never knows what tree roots push to the surface of what laid buried before the tree was planted - Larry C
“The farther back you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.” - Winston Churchill
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Great info here, and a beauty of a dagger/grip combo!! Kevin.
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Thanks for the kind comments guys! Interesting information about the grips. I learned something new
Danny
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Beautiful dagger and interesting info about glass grips,thanks.
I once owned almost the same dagger, but I cannot remember where it ended up
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Never seen that happen before Peter. The cloth wasn't micro-fibre or similar was it, i.e semi-abrasive?.
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On the right track IMO, a standard procedure for restoring cast phenolic resin objects to an approximation of their original color is to polish away the (unintentional) surface layer which is not very thick. With broken items such as grips that are broken once again showing multiple shades as the previously broken parts that started to age from the time they were first broken, contrasting with the freshly broken parts. So if I had to make a guess - it's that the grip may have at some point been polished (or worn away) on the more exposed part of the grip that was not quite as thick as the surface layer inside the grooves. Best Regards, Fred
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Hi to all, sorry for my late reply to this thread - I had a lot of work
Jon, no it was standard piece of cloth from my old T-shirt, nothing unusual, I use it to clear dust from my daggers - and this happen to me for first time with this dagger.
Frogprince (funny name) - thanks for your opinion, I don´t want to polish this grip too hard, I just want to clean it and then cloth become orange and grip lost some of its orange color - I inspect dagger today again and try to polish it (lightly) and nothing happen...
Thanks for your opinions friend and valuable help!
Best regards Peter
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Danny nice dagger as Jon said very hard to find a glass grip that’s not damaged in some way. Here’s some food for thought we all know artificial ivory grips were made I have always wondered if these glass grips were intended to be artificial amber? We know the Germans had a fascination with amber. None the less nice addition to your collection Danny.
Last edited by T Kendall; 06-21-2014 at 03:06 AM.
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