The Bone Folders

By Joe Berk

I haven’t done a knife story in awhile,  but that doesn’t mean I haven’t been buying.  Some of these online knife stores’ websites are addictive, and the Chicago Knife Works site certainly falls into that category.  It’s fun just perusing their offerings.  Sometimes, I’ll see something that piques my interest and then I’ll search on a feature that a particular knife has.  That occurred recently when I saw a folder I likes with bone handles (or scales, to use knife aficionado terminology).

Bone as a scale material is intriguing to me, partly because I like the way it looks, partly because it looks like ivory, and partly because of a recent visit to the fabled Colt Custom Shop in West Hartford, Connecticut.  When I saw an artist crafting custom grips on a Colt 1873 Single Action Army, I asked about the material (knowing that ivory was no longer available).  The answer, as good friend and Colt factory guide Tim told me, was bone.  Giraffe bone, to be specific.  I would never have imagined.

Anyway, to get back to the main attraction, I saw a Marbles folding knife with white bone scales on the Chicago Knife Works site and I liked it, so I searched on all Marbles folders with bone scales.  What the site’s search returned was intriguing.

I liked every one of the knives I saw, and Chicago Knife Works‘ prices are so reasonable I pulled the trigger on all of them.  Cheap fun, and they looked good on the Chicago Knife Works site.  They arrived a few days later (all the above, with shipping, was only about $50), and I can tell you they look even better in person.

All the knives are appealing, and I like the white bone appearance.  The canoe style is one I’ve written about before, and in my opinion, it is about the perfect-sized pocketknife for pocket carry.  It has two blades and both are razor sharp.  The work knife (also known as a sodbuster) is a single-bladed knife and its name comes from the fact that it is designed to be used by a working man (like a farmer).  The trapper knife (as you might have guessed) is the design preferred by trappers.  It has two blades:  One with a clip point and the other with a spey blade (we’ve mentioned those before; my Case Stockman knife also has a spey blade).  And finally, there’s that gorgeous two-bladed sunfish knife, which is a big knife.  It gets its name from its sunfish-like shape.

The Sunfish is a physically big knife, as the following photos show:

I can’t say which of the above knives I like the best, so I’ll cut to the chase and tell you that I like them all.  So much so, I continued the quest for knives with white bone scales.

Most recently, I purchased a large folder (the Rough Ryder Deer Slayer) from another knife supplier only because Chicago Knife Works didn’t have it in stock.  I’ve written about it before.

I like the look and size of the Deer Slayer so much that I started poking around to see if that knife was available with white bone scales.  It was.  The manufacturer this time is Hen and Rooster, and I was able to order it from Chicago Knife Works.

I guess I should say the importer, not the manufacturer, as I suspect the same manufacturer makes knives for several importers with slight differences to meet the importers’ marketing strategies.  I don’t have the Hen and Rooster knife yet, but when I get it, I’ll post a few photos in a future blog.


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