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Home Products Price Knives Belt Buckle

Price Knives Belt Buckle

by Tiffany & Co., Price, Michael

SKU 176007

Date Added 08/24/2016

# Available This product is out of stock

Price $75.00

Overview

Brass Belt Buckle. Stamped "Tiffany New York" and "International Exhibition"Excellent condition.

Product Details

Weight (oz) 6.2

Additional Specs

About the Maker

Price, Michael

Born in Limerick, Ireland, Michael Price was the son of a notable Irish knifemaker. Seeking to escape the dreary conditions of Ireland he chose to immigrate to America where he would establish himself in the craft taught him by his father. Price made his way to San Francisco, California, where in the 1860s a man of his skill and talents with edged steel were welcome and indeed necessary. Price arrived in San Francisco in 1856. He is reported to have begun earning his initial “grubstake” as a water pipe foreman. Price began making knives in earnest in 1858. He won both growing attention and high acclaim while exhibiting at the very first Mechanics Fair in San Francisco where he advertised no better steel could be found in any other knife made by his competition. Price knives and edged tools came with form-fitted leather and/or metal scabbards, belt clips, and often his signature bulbous grips. His and his father’s working knives are most often found relying on cured stag grip panels, carefully fitted, and pinned to the blade’s full tang. In 1859, Price set up his first cutlery shop in the corner of the firearms store of A.J. Taylor. Taylor was a popular arms dealer who sold, among other noteworthy firearms, the highly popular derringer. He was shot in the face with his own merchandise by a careless client according to San Francisco legend…and lived to talk about it. By 1860, Michael Price was swiftly becoming a popular California knifemaker. He designed and made everything from utility blades to first-class gambler’s push daggers and the ever-popular Bowie style knife. His father, who had specialized in working knives for his Irish customers, soon joined his son. A Price bowie was said to be capable of being stabbed through a stack of three silver dollars while still retaining its edge. Also different from other makers’ work in San Francisco at the time was this: A Price bowie knife, or any of the large camp knives offered by the Prices, were “heavy bladed.” They were meant to be used and used hard by buffalo hunters, miners, gunslingers, cattlemen and those pioneers traveling northward into the Pacific Northwest and Alaska. The perfect balance of a Price camp knife became legendary around campfires throughout the frontier. The Price maker’s mark was often just slightly off-kilt upon being applied to the finished knife. “M. Price – San Francisco” became a much sought after “silent partner” by gamblers, lawmen, outlaws, pioneers, and gentlemen collectors passing through or living in San Francisco. Michael Price Sr. instilled in his son the gift of thoughtful yet elegant design for their knives and other edged products, such as the popular Price straight razor. The two established the crucial understanding of both Form and Function, emulated by their competitors who sought to keep up with the dynamic duo. Their workmanship, the materials used, heat treating and tempering, and the correct edge geometry for each style of blade made a Price knife unique among all others. An original Price knife fits the hand like a custom-made glove and becomes an extension of the man or woman wielding it. Any Frontier Partisan would be proud to own a Price bowie knife such as the author’s. Custom forged steel, brass double guard, fitted and pinned stag grips, and form fitted leather scabbard with German silver fittings make this Price edged tool both beautiful and functional. Price Jr. found his niche by creating what are today commonly referred to as “Art knives”. He worked with exotic handle materials such as ivory and abalone shell. His ability to meld gold and silver into a design, using these precious metals to form a blade’s guard and pommel, as well as for the ever-important sheath or scabbard, captured the imagination of those who could afford a Michael Price gentleman’s “silent partner”. Precious jewels and stones would likewise become a decorative trademark of Price’s. Today, examples of Price knife art reach astronomical prices at auction as do his working knives and tools such as Price made corkscrews. Michael Price is no doubt the best known “California Knife” maker of the 19th Century. His California, or “San Francisco Bowies” as they are commonly referred to, are each unique in their design to include form-fitted metal scabbards and belt clips. Michael Price passed away in April 1889, four years after his father. However, their work lives on in collections around the world. The son-father team are today credited with inspiring modern American designers and makers such as Al Mar, Bill Bagwell, Bill Moran, Gil Hibben, and other equally legendary giants in the realm of edged weaponry and daily use tools. (Written by Greg Walker)