When I was a young boy growing up in NJ, one of my school friends dad was knife maker. The ones I remember were higher end folders with scrimshaw that he did. Lew Booth died years ago and I always remembered thinking it was cool that my friends dad made knives in the basement.
Fast forward 30 years to a gun show in North Idaho, I was walking around and happened to spot a little skinning knife and on it was stamped the name Lew Booth. I paid the man his asking price, and walked away happy that I found this little piece of history (to me).
Now for the question(s) for you knife makers. This knife has what I would describe as a severe hollow grind and a severe distal taper. Wondering how this will affect performance for its seemingly intended use of skinning. The belly seems good for it, but the knife is so thin due to the hollow grind, I think it might drag in meat. As in get sucked in.
I am very interested in they whys of knife design because I am learning to make knives, and this knife seems and excellent study in design, whether it is good or bad in design.
I think this knife is fairly old and maybe an early example of Lew Booth's work. I think it is a stainless steel, polished fairly highly, to where I can see the grain in the steel. It has a bakelite handle. One strange thing I can't figure out is at the end of the tang there is a 1/8" brass plug.
Any comments would be appreciated. I am planning on making a sheath for this little skinner and hunting with it this year.