Grading The Condition of a Knife
Grading The Condition of a Knife
The widely accepted guidelines are those established by the
National Knife Collectors Association and are described below:
Mint - A knife that is absolutely original as it came from the
manufacturer. Never used, carried, sharpened, nor heavily
cleaned. An unblemished knife. Near Mint - A new-condition knife
that may show very slight signs of carry or shop wear. Blades
are not worn and snap perfectly. Handles show no cracks. Most of
original finish is obvious. Excellent - A knife that shows no
more than 10 percent blade wear. Handles are sound with no
cracks. Blades snap well. Some discoloration of blades or
handles is acceptable. May have been heavily cleaned. Very Good
- A knife with up to 25 percent blade wear, slight cracks in
handles. No blades nor other parts replaced or repaired.
Stamping clearly visible to the naked eye. Fair - A knife with
up to 50 percent blade wear, cracks, or chips in handles. Blades
"lazy" (lacking snap) and may have been repaired. Stamping faint
but readable with magnifying glass. Poor - Blades very worn or
may have been replaced with ones of same type. Handles bad or
missing. Reading of stamping nearly impossible. A knife valued
for its parts.
Reposted from NKCA.org
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