Tuna Valley Cutlery Co., Excelsior Knife Co., & Napanoch Knife Co. are three popular brands currently controlled by The Daniels family. These are old names that went dormant for years, but have since been brought back to life with modern offerings. This forum is here to discuss & show off knives & related items with brand names under the Daniels Family umbrella.
USN 2000-2006
Adaptable and (usually) affable knife enthusiast, unsure of his knife collecting destination but enjoying the journey
Case taste, Rough Ryder budget
Way back in 2020, the first DFKB Tuna Valley Old Man Norman pattern was in pre-development. This was the first prototype, helping to see what needed tweaked or modified or adjusted. Notice the grind and nailpull are a lot different on this one than what the final release settled on.
This is a 2020 prototype of the Phoenix Jack pattern. The design had not yet been finalized, and they were playing with different variations. This one has a long pull, and hollow grind blade, with really nice amber stag.
Rookie wrote: ↑Fri May 26, 2023 5:14 pm
This is a 2020 prototype of the Phoenix Jack pattern. The design had not yet been finalized, and they were playing with different variations. This one has a long pull, and hollow grind blade, with really nice amber stag.
You're not wrong about the Stag. Getting very hard to source now. Thanks for the pic.
Rookie wrote: ↑Fri May 26, 2023 5:14 pm
This is a 2020 prototype of the Phoenix Jack pattern. The design had not yet been finalized, and they were playing with different variations. This one has a long pull, and hollow grind blade, with really nice amber stag.
Incredible knife Rookie, that is some really nice antler and the colors and great blade. Wish there were more hollow grinds around. Sweet show.
You too Kennedy knives, that is a pack of beauties.
"It's what people know about themselves inside that makes them afraid." -No Name, High Plains Drifter
Rookie wrote: ↑Wed May 31, 2023 2:06 pm
These are the 2 different Coke Bottle knives from 2013.
Nice! This show just keeps getting better and better.
kennedy knives wrote: ↑Wed May 31, 2023 3:34 pm
Not sure that I posted these
Gary, do you know why is there so much variation in the pattern of the Damascus blades?
Strickly a guess as Ryan hasn't said who he uses for the Damascus but from just a hunch it looks like Brad Vise Alabama Damascus and was done at different times with different patterns. I understand it takes about 15 hrs. to finish one piece, That's a lot of hammering. Gary
When the brand was first relaunched by Perry Miller of Spaceport Cutlery in 2007, he went to then newly formed GEC to have knives made. There are a few prototypes out there from 07-08, but this is the 1st production release that came out in 2009, called a Scout Trapper.
In 2021 there was a new pattern idea in the works that never went further than the prototype phase. This is the North Carolina Jack. A swayback pattern 3 3/4 inch with wharncliffe blade. 5 different handle materials.
Rookie wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 1:15 pm
In 2021 there was a new pattern idea in the works that never went further than the prototype phase. This is the North Carolina Jack. A swayback pattern 3 3/4 inch with wharncliffe blade. 5 different handle materials.
Looks like the little brother to the Phoenix Jack. Shame they never went into production; I would definitely have wanted one...especially with Mammoth covers. Those are all beauties and I continue to and be with envy!
Rookie wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 1:15 pm
In 2021 there was a new pattern idea in the works that never went further than the prototype phase. This is the North Carolina Jack. A swayback pattern 3 3/4 inch with wharncliffe blade. 5 different handle materials.
Looks like the little brother to the Phoenix Jack. Shame they never went into production; I would definitely have wanted one...especially with Mammoth covers. Those are all beauties and I continue to and be with envy!
I agree, it is a nice pattern. I think the thought was, too similar to the Phoenix, and there are so many other patterns out there still to focus on for showing variety. I'm sure it will be re-visited again some day down the road.