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Fern + Roe | Canadian Hide Tanning
About
About Hide Tanning
Courses we offer
Hide Tanning Resources
Fern + Roe FAQs
Learn With Us
Upcoming In-person Courses
Private Group Instruction
Hide Club
Self-Paced Online Courses
1:1 Mentorship
Hide Club: Smoke-Tanning
Hide Club: Summer Camp
Shop For Tools
0
0
Visit Upcoming Courses
Folder: About
Back
About Hide Tanning
Courses we offer
Hide Tanning Resources
Fern + Roe FAQs
Folder: Learn With Us
Back
Upcoming In-person Courses
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Hide Club
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Hide Club: Smoke-Tanning
Hide Club: Summer Camp
Shop For Tools
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Shop Head Knife - single bevel
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Head Knife - single bevel

CA$89.99
sold out

Type of tool: opener + dry scraper + softener

Use with: Any hide, in a frame or in your lap as a hand tool. As a dry scraper, it will peel layers of skin on the membrane side and clear away ground substance/corium on the grain side. As a softener, it will stretch the fibres of skin apart to soften.

A small rounded-blade dry scraper that fits in the palm of the hand. This is an English style blade called a Head Knife. The handle sits atop the single-bevelled steel blade and the knife can be handled one-handed or grasped with both hands, as you scrape downwards away from the bevelled edge on a hide.

How to use: Keep edge super sharp to use as a dry scraper, or let it go dull to use as a softener. This blade has sharp corners so make sure your hide is tight in a frame when using.

Always move this tool in a downward motion (with bevel facing up to the sky) to keep the bevel intact: “bevel up, scrape down.”

The symbol of the Head Knife became synonymous with hide tanners and leather workers in the British Isles. Its likeness was the public emblem of leather guild shops (a pictographic brand during oral/non-literate times). It is still used by many European hide tanners in their branding and logos. This is a bit of a creative take on the classic Head Knife design - traditionally in England, the Head Knife had a long, round handle similar to our tool The Handheld.

This Head Knife is akin to the Italian Mezzaluna, the Nordic Ulo, and the Athabaskan Ulu: cultures around the world have come up with the shape that best scrapes a dry hide, while innovating unique handle styles that are emblematic of the creators.

Tool made by Stevan de la Rosa in the Sonoran Desert. The handle is harvested Mesquite wood + the steel is reclaimed.

Measures 4″ x 6″

Prices are in USD. Click the upper-right tab to view local currency. Tool orders ship on Wednesdays.

Add To Cart

Type of tool: opener + dry scraper + softener

Use with: Any hide, in a frame or in your lap as a hand tool. As a dry scraper, it will peel layers of skin on the membrane side and clear away ground substance/corium on the grain side. As a softener, it will stretch the fibres of skin apart to soften.

A small rounded-blade dry scraper that fits in the palm of the hand. This is an English style blade called a Head Knife. The handle sits atop the single-bevelled steel blade and the knife can be handled one-handed or grasped with both hands, as you scrape downwards away from the bevelled edge on a hide.

How to use: Keep edge super sharp to use as a dry scraper, or let it go dull to use as a softener. This blade has sharp corners so make sure your hide is tight in a frame when using.

Always move this tool in a downward motion (with bevel facing up to the sky) to keep the bevel intact: “bevel up, scrape down.”

The symbol of the Head Knife became synonymous with hide tanners and leather workers in the British Isles. Its likeness was the public emblem of leather guild shops (a pictographic brand during oral/non-literate times). It is still used by many European hide tanners in their branding and logos. This is a bit of a creative take on the classic Head Knife design - traditionally in England, the Head Knife had a long, round handle similar to our tool The Handheld.

This Head Knife is akin to the Italian Mezzaluna, the Nordic Ulo, and the Athabaskan Ulu: cultures around the world have come up with the shape that best scrapes a dry hide, while innovating unique handle styles that are emblematic of the creators.

Tool made by Stevan de la Rosa in the Sonoran Desert. The handle is harvested Mesquite wood + the steel is reclaimed.

Measures 4″ x 6″

Prices are in USD. Click the upper-right tab to view local currency. Tool orders ship on Wednesdays.

Type of tool: opener + dry scraper + softener

Use with: Any hide, in a frame or in your lap as a hand tool. As a dry scraper, it will peel layers of skin on the membrane side and clear away ground substance/corium on the grain side. As a softener, it will stretch the fibres of skin apart to soften.

A small rounded-blade dry scraper that fits in the palm of the hand. This is an English style blade called a Head Knife. The handle sits atop the single-bevelled steel blade and the knife can be handled one-handed or grasped with both hands, as you scrape downwards away from the bevelled edge on a hide.

How to use: Keep edge super sharp to use as a dry scraper, or let it go dull to use as a softener. This blade has sharp corners so make sure your hide is tight in a frame when using.

Always move this tool in a downward motion (with bevel facing up to the sky) to keep the bevel intact: “bevel up, scrape down.”

The symbol of the Head Knife became synonymous with hide tanners and leather workers in the British Isles. Its likeness was the public emblem of leather guild shops (a pictographic brand during oral/non-literate times). It is still used by many European hide tanners in their branding and logos. This is a bit of a creative take on the classic Head Knife design - traditionally in England, the Head Knife had a long, round handle similar to our tool The Handheld.

This Head Knife is akin to the Italian Mezzaluna, the Nordic Ulo, and the Athabaskan Ulu: cultures around the world have come up with the shape that best scrapes a dry hide, while innovating unique handle styles that are emblematic of the creators.

Tool made by Stevan de la Rosa in the Sonoran Desert. The handle is harvested Mesquite wood + the steel is reclaimed.

Measures 4″ x 6″

Prices are in USD. Click the upper-right tab to view local currency. Tool orders ship on Wednesdays.

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