bbbarracuda
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2008
- Messages
- 709

Got it. Frankly, I was just thinking handheld or propped up cardboard sign, and, with a relatively modern frame of mind, not classic, vintage, LIFE magazine photo worthy era panhandling. The pencil did not register at all. Just a blindspot in my historical knowledge base, I guess.that's why my hint was "everything you need except a cardboard sign."
XActo utility knife,
Those funny hooked blades are used by guys who lay carpet





Sure enough shows in the 1958 catalog, "ideally".Xacto generally makes tools for the hobby/workbench so not that surprising they would make something like that with no retracting or ease of tool box storage or pocket carry. I have several wood boxes for Xacto tools, but never with that one in them. I do like the looks of that one and assuming it fit the hand well I'd pick one up.
Actually I think those hook blades were designed for linoleum before vinyl took over so much. Certainly it could be used for carpet, but all the carpet layers I've seen for the past 4 decades or so use these:

Xacto generally makes tools for the hobby/workbench so not that surprising they would make something like that with no retracting or ease of tool box storage or pocket carry. .







The tool gods have smiled upon me today:
and the Porter Cable plunge base from a couple weeks ago
those look like covers for a big chisel or a slick.










Oh, I bet they're capable of slicing skin. But THESE (attached) are vintage linoleum or carpet knives in my neck o' the woods, if I was home I would post my examples instead of this handy excerpt from IA/ITCL, and, no, I wouldn't call a retractable blade inside a Stanley handle quite as "serious" in terms of its construction and durability. A hawkbill knife in a wooden handle with a ferrule will take your whole dang finger off!...just in case you don't think they're "serious".
Dang, Bill! Big score. Congrats.Big old box of Plomb.
You must have been a VERY good boy this year. I’m really jealous and by the way, you ****!I went way out of my normal grazing zone for a CL pickup yesterday. Found a nice galvanized watering can for my daughter and she also gets the Heinz ketchup themed triceratops. For me, it was a Big-Box-O-Plomb. All photos "as found".
Watering can in ride-along position.
Suprisingly hefty triceratops is a collectible of the full-size decorated dino that appeared in downtown Pittsburgh once upon a time.
Big old box of Plomb. Most I've ever seen in the wild in my area.
Two 1/4" boxes, Wright Field 3/8" speeder, 5402 beam torque wrench, etc.
Pebble DOEs.
Pebble DBEs.
Pebble combos.
Miscellaneous 1/2" drive stuff, chisel, screwdriver.
Miscellaneous pre-war dated items.
And the rest.
I never had much of a pebble collection, but all these may have just found a home in my grubby 9990 box!
Bill
YIKES!^ The first TOOL I ever purchased was a wood-handled linoleum knife from Vaughn Hardware at 84th & Pacific, and they cut me off a nice chunk of Alaskan Yellow Cedar about a foot long. I brought them home and was going to carve a boat.
I brought them both home, sat down under the locust tree in the back yard, and immediately sliced open my left thumb to the bone, which required a quick trip to the doctor's office and 8 stitches. I was almost 12 years old. I can almost still see a faint shadow of the scar.
Thanks for the reminder.![]()
In defense of the Stanley hooked blade, it wouldn't dig into the underlayment or wood floor cutting into the sheet goods, cut to fit inside the room. I wouldn't know, just thinking of how scissors are used, some people can slice other people open and close on the cut.Oh, I bet they're capable of slicing skin. But THESE (attached) are vintage linoleum or carpet knives in my neck o' the woods, if I was home I would post my examples instead of this handy excerpt from IA/ITCL, and, no, I wouldn't call a retractable blade inside a Stanley handle quite as "serious" in terms of its construction and durability. A hawkbill knife in a wooden handle with a ferrule will take your whole dang finger off!![]()

You ****!The tool gods have smiled upon me today:
...
Grand total: $70
That is a hell of a find! Guessing the ride wasn’t so bad after grabbing that stuff! Oh yeah “you ****”I went way out of my normal grazing zone for a CL pickup yesterday. Found a nice galvanized watering can for my daughter and she also gets the Heinz ketchup themed triceratops. For me, it was a Big-Box-O-Plomb. All photos "as found".
Watering can in ride-along position.
Suprisingly hefty triceratops is a collectible of the full-size decorated dino that appeared in downtown Pittsburgh once upon a time.
Big old box of Plomb. Most I've ever seen in the wild in my area.
Two 1/4" boxes, Wright Field 3/8" speeder, 5402 beam torque wrench, etc.
Pebble DOEs.
Pebble DBEs.
Pebble combos.
Miscellaneous 1/2" drive stuff, chisel, screwdriver.
Miscellaneous pre-war dated items.
And the rest.
I never had much of a pebble collection, but all these may have just found a home in my grubby 9990 box!
Bill


I went way out of my normal grazing zone for a CL pickup yesterday. Found a nice galvanized watering can for my daughter and she also gets the Heinz ketchup themed triceratops. For me, it was a Big-Box-O-Plomb. All photos "as found".
Watering can in ride-along position.
Suprisingly hefty triceratops is a collectible of the full-size decorated dino that appeared in downtown Pittsburgh once upon a time.
Big old box of Plomb. Most I've ever seen in the wild in my area.
Two 1/4" boxes, Wright Field 3/8" speeder, 5402 beam torque wrench, etc.
Pebble DOEs.
Pebble DBEs.
Pebble combos.
Miscellaneous 1/2" drive stuff, chisel, screwdriver.
Miscellaneous pre-war dated items.
And the rest.
I never had much of a pebble collection, but all these may have just found a home in my grubby 9990 box!
Bill
^ The first TOOL I ever purchased was a wood-handled linoleum knife from Vaughn Hardware at 84th & Pacific, and they cut me off a nice chunk of Alaskan Yellow Cedar about a foot long. I brought them home and was going to carve a boat.
I brought them both home, sat down under the locust tree in the back yard, and immediately sliced open my left thumb to the bone, which required a quick trip to the doctor's office and 8 stitches. I was almost 12 years old. I can almost still see a faint shadow of the scar.
Thanks for the reminder.![]()
In defense of the Stanley hooked blade, it wouldn't dig into the underlayment or wood floor cutting into the sheet goods, cut to fit inside the room. I wouldn't know, just thinking of how scissors are used, some people can slice other people open and close on the cut.
akasrick
I do indeed have the router.Do you have the router for that? If not maybe a trade?
I went way out of my normal grazing zone for a CL pickup yesterday. Found a nice galvanized watering can for my daughter and she also gets the Heinz ketchup themed triceratops. For me, it was a Big-Box-O-Plomb. All photos "as found".
Post more photos here or in the 'Knife' thread down on the VB, please.Buffalo machete;
Haha! Funny how you remember every cut and every broken bone like it was yesterday.Thanks for the reminder.
Private Lugnutz said:"Funny how you remember every ..."