I think the big issue with all of the knives I've bought, tried, and given away is they have no soul. It's like using a compound after you've discovered long bows.
Maybe that's why I give away the knives that worked okay. Not including the knives I've made I think I've gone thru close to 80 different knives now looking for something I can be happy with. I've found two of the 80 or so that, reflecting back, did everything I asked of them pretty well. The problem is I hated carring them because they seemed lifeless. I just couldn't bring myself to allow them to be displayed on my side.
Maybe that's why I pick up new folders from time to time. I can have a knife that works and yet keep it hidden from view.
Of the knives I've made only 2 made the trip to the woods more than once. I discovered they either didn't hold an edge good enough to get the deer from the field, to the tree, to the processing table, and in the freezer without a couple trips to the stone or they were to ugly to be dispplayed proudly.
If I only had your talent!
I think I'd probally make a knife close to the first one I displayed, with stag handles, a 4" blade made of D2 no more than 1/6" thick. Something thin enough it was almost flexable but thick enough to have some backbone. The silver bolster would smooth the transition from blade to handle and help protect the stag or slect wooden handle.
Heck, maybe I just spend too much time thinking about what designs, materials, and grades/types of blade steel I would play with if I could create a knife from scratch half as good as yours. You make some pretty neat knifes for sure!