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			Join Date: Jul 2005 
				Location: Tallahassee, FL 
				
				
					Posts: 131
				 
				
				
				
				
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			I thought it might be interesting to have a thread featuring photos of blades with scraped in fullers. I'll start   
		
		
		
			  This piece on the bottom has lovely fullers  | 
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		#2 | 
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			Join Date: Jul 2005 
				Location: Tallahassee, FL 
				
				
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			105 views and no one likes fullers? Come on!   
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	   Just grab one pic from your caches of sword pics, lets see the diversity of decorative and practical fullers!
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		#3 | 
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			 (deceased) 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: East Coast USA 
				
				
					Posts: 3,191
				 
				
				
				
				
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			How about these. 
		
		
		
			Lew Last edited by LOUIEBLADES; 19th October 2008 at 04:16 AM.  | 
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		#4 | 
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			Join Date: Mar 2005 
				Location: Austin, Texas USA 
				
				
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			If a series of alternating "scraped in" grooves runs the length of the blade, does that qualify as a fuller? 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	 
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		#5 | 
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			 Member 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: Italia 
				
				
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			Hi guys, here are some of mine   
		
		
		
			 
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		#6 | 
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			 Member 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: Italia 
				
				
					Posts: 1,243
				 
				
				
				
				
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			some more.....
		 
		
		
		
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		#7 | 
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			 Member 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: Athens Greece 
				
				
					Posts: 479
				 
				
				
				
				
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			I propose to keep the thread on strange - unusual fullers 
		
		
		
			This is my best on fullers  | 
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		#8 | 
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			 Member 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Jul 2005 
				Location: Tallahassee, FL 
				
				
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			Wow great examples!  
		
		
		
			Yannis, that knife you posted would have been even more of a pain than some other pieces-- It's easiest to follow the edge or spine when scraping, but that piece used a jig that the blade was clamped into in order to get the non-edge-or-spine following fullers. Cool! Here's another, you can really see the scraper marks in the second pic, the smith didnt do any more clean-up.  | 
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		#9 | 
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			 (deceased) 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: East Coast USA 
				
				
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			Two or more for the road.
		 
		
		
		
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		#10 | 
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			Join Date: Feb 2006 
				Location: France 
				
				
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			Ngombe knives. 
		
		
		
			Luc  | 
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		#11 | 
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			 (deceased) 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: East Coast USA 
				
				
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			Fullers Boa tribe style  
		
		
		
			 
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		#12 | 
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			In Standard English, we cannot have a fuller in a blade unless it has been created by the process of stamping with the tool of the same name. 
		
		
		
			When we scrape a fuller-like depression in a blade we are sculpting the blade, not fullering it. However, this is pedantry, and it is probably acceptable in loose colloquial usage to use "fuller" to describe a fuller-like depression, or similar feature. The example shown in this post is a keris blade that shows multi "fullering", both with and across the grain of the metal. The way in which this is done is not by use of a jig, but by scribing the outline of the feature, and then cutting that outline with cold chisels. In a deep depression the bulk of the material is removed with chisels and gouges, the surface is refined with scrapers, refined further with files, and then polished. Using modern technology the polishing can be done with wet and dry paper, but powdered terracotta mixed with water is also a very effective polishing agent.  | 
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		#13 | 
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			Join Date: Aug 2008 
				
				
				
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			I am not sure if these fullers are scraped or forged.    
		
		
		
			 
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