(This post was last modified: 09-26-2016, 06:04 PM by Bob Quinn.)
It has been a bit eventful the past several weeks.
I am very pleased to have established a relationship with BarberBrands, Inc (www.barberbrands.com.au), who will be offering my pieces in the Australian/New Zealand market. My first shipment will be available just as soon as the good folks in the Australian Customs Office finish admiring my work.
Unrelated, but very serendipitous, my work was recently featured in an article in the current issue of The Cutthroat Journal (see link below, pages 74-75), a Barber's and Men's grooming publication. A good friend of my neighbor, who owns several Barber Shops in Australia, was visiting from Sydney several months ago and came by to look at my work. Upon his return, he asked for some pictures and authored a very nice article about my shop. A very pleasant surprise.
http://thecutthroatjournal.com/issue/
In the meantime, the response to the Manchurian White and High Mountain White premium knots has been extraordinary. I still have a good stock, but they are going quickly.
I have had the opportunity to finish a couple of new pieces that are listed and available on my site at www.eliterazor.com.
Copper Laced Onyx - Copper Laced Onyx is a member of the chalcedony family which also includes carnelian, agate, bloodstone, etc. Occurring naturally in a variety of colors, black onyx is polished to enhance appearance and is a member of the quartz family. The name comes from the Greek word onyx which means nail of a finger or claw. Legend says that one day while Venus was sleeping Eros/Cupid cut her fingernails and left the clippings scattered on the ground. Because no part of a heavenly body can die, the gods turned them into stone which later became known as Onyx.
Blue Lapis - This opaque, deep blue gemstone has a grand past. It was among the first gemstones to be worked on and worn as jewelry. At excavations in the ancient centers of culture around the Mediterranean, archaeologists have again and again found among the grave furnishings decorative chains and figures made of Lapis – clear indications that the deep blue stone was already popular thousands of years ago among the people of Mesopotamia, Egypt, Persia, Greece and Rome. It is said that the legendary city of Ur on the Euphrates plied a keen Lapis trade as long ago as the fourth millennium B.C., the material coming to the land of the two great rivers from the famous deposits in Afghanistan. In other cultures, Lapis was regarded as a holy stone. Particularly in the Middle East, it was thought to have magical powers.
The brush shown below was made by custom request and has gone to live in its' new home. Many thanks to Doug Korn for making some of his translucent material available to me for this piece.
I've also added a number of new razor handles.
Irish Bog Oak
Two-tone Desert Ironwood burl
As always, thanks for looking,
Bob
I am very pleased to have established a relationship with BarberBrands, Inc (www.barberbrands.com.au), who will be offering my pieces in the Australian/New Zealand market. My first shipment will be available just as soon as the good folks in the Australian Customs Office finish admiring my work.
Unrelated, but very serendipitous, my work was recently featured in an article in the current issue of The Cutthroat Journal (see link below, pages 74-75), a Barber's and Men's grooming publication. A good friend of my neighbor, who owns several Barber Shops in Australia, was visiting from Sydney several months ago and came by to look at my work. Upon his return, he asked for some pictures and authored a very nice article about my shop. A very pleasant surprise.
http://thecutthroatjournal.com/issue/
In the meantime, the response to the Manchurian White and High Mountain White premium knots has been extraordinary. I still have a good stock, but they are going quickly.
I have had the opportunity to finish a couple of new pieces that are listed and available on my site at www.eliterazor.com.
Copper Laced Onyx - Copper Laced Onyx is a member of the chalcedony family which also includes carnelian, agate, bloodstone, etc. Occurring naturally in a variety of colors, black onyx is polished to enhance appearance and is a member of the quartz family. The name comes from the Greek word onyx which means nail of a finger or claw. Legend says that one day while Venus was sleeping Eros/Cupid cut her fingernails and left the clippings scattered on the ground. Because no part of a heavenly body can die, the gods turned them into stone which later became known as Onyx.
Blue Lapis - This opaque, deep blue gemstone has a grand past. It was among the first gemstones to be worked on and worn as jewelry. At excavations in the ancient centers of culture around the Mediterranean, archaeologists have again and again found among the grave furnishings decorative chains and figures made of Lapis – clear indications that the deep blue stone was already popular thousands of years ago among the people of Mesopotamia, Egypt, Persia, Greece and Rome. It is said that the legendary city of Ur on the Euphrates plied a keen Lapis trade as long ago as the fourth millennium B.C., the material coming to the land of the two great rivers from the famous deposits in Afghanistan. In other cultures, Lapis was regarded as a holy stone. Particularly in the Middle East, it was thought to have magical powers.
The brush shown below was made by custom request and has gone to live in its' new home. Many thanks to Doug Korn for making some of his translucent material available to me for this piece.
I've also added a number of new razor handles.
Irish Bog Oak
Two-tone Desert Ironwood burl
As always, thanks for looking,
Bob