Frontier Style Long Knife and War Club Set

Product Description for Frontier Style Long Knife and War Club Set

Maker: Cactus Rose (click to see more by this maker)
Item num: 2361
*** This is handmade and one-of-a-kind ***
Blade length: 9.00 in.
Total length: 14.75 in.
Blade height (at heel): 1.30 in.
Blade thickness (near bolster): 0.20 in.
Item weight: 9.35 oz.
Shipment weight: 45.12 oz.
Blade: Antiqued 5160 carbon steel
Handle: Deer leg bone
Sheath: Rawhide with a brain tanned deer hide cover, decorated with beads, cones and hawk bells.
Description: This war club/quirt started out as a leg bone from a Texas Longhorn. When Chuck Burrows of Wild Rose Trading Co. saw this bone while boiling up a batch of beef broth, a light bulb went off in his head. After drying it out, he added the mule deer antler grip, brass tacks, brain tanned deer hide fringe, tin cones, and beadwork. Working in collaboration with Gib Guignard, of Cactus Forge, a forged rustic finish blade was added. The 5160 carbon steel blade is based on the original dag style blade traded by the Hudson's Bay Company. The blade was etched/antiqued by Chuck and then mounted in the period style using a couple of cross pins and cutler's resin, which is based on a pine pitch formula. Chuck then added the traditional buckskin drop, which is beaded using 19th century reproduction pony beads in the Northern Plains style. In true Mountain Man/Indian fashion, it is also decorated with tin cones, hawk bells, and copper beads.
The graceful blade of the frontiersman's knife was also forged by Gib from 5160 carbon steel with his rustic forge finish. He added period file work on the spine and a Spanish notch, which really catch the eye. The blade was then shipped to Chuck who etched/antiqued it. In keeping with the theme set by the bone of the warclub, for a grip he used a piece of mule deer leg bone. Feeling that a standard metal crossguard would look out of place, Chuck made the bolster from a piece of mule deer antler. Maintaining the frontier style, he used a braided rawhide knot to cover the joint between the bone grip and antler bolster rather than a conventional metal or wood spacer. To finish it brass tacks were added to match the war club/quirt.
To complete the ensemble, Chuck made a sheath in the traditional manner with a rawhide liner and a brain tanned deer hide cover. Like the warclub, it is decorated with reproduction pony beads, tin cones, hawk bells, bone beads and copper beads.


Availability: Not currently available