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  1. #1
    Join Date
    26th February 12
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    Lake in the Hills, IL
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    I have been wearing my DIY antler handled Sgian dubh, I have found that I'm often in need of a blade for things throughout the day, and having a 2.5 year old I'm endlessly opening boxes, popping zip ties that secure toys to packaging, cutting into that heavy heat sealed plastic that everything now days is packed in.....

    I'm not a fancy evening attire type guy so I haven't needed anything other than my utilitarian blade I made. And honestly in the event I find myself dressed to the nines I really doubt I would buy a froo-froo Sgian to tuck in my hose, I would be wearing my trusty homemade one, and wearing it proudly at that.
    "Everything is within walking distance if you've got the time"

  2. #2
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    18th October 09
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    I try to keep my kit as pared-down as possible, usually doing without waistcoat, belt, kilt pin, or sgian.

    But I've noticed over the years that, when I'm out at a piping gig (which is usually the only time I'm kilted), the sgian draws an inordinate amount of attention from the General Public. So, being that I'm (in effect) putting on a show I try to remember to wear the sgian.

    BTW sgian means 'knife' and dubh means 'black' so a sgian made from antler, or any other substance that isn't black, isn't a sgian-dhubh per se. (Sgian-chabar??)

    BTW the plural of sgian is sginean.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

  3. #3
    Join Date
    27th October 09
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    Kerrville, Texas
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    Quote Originally Posted by OC Richard View Post
    BTW sgian means 'knife' and dubh means 'black' so a sgian made from antler, or any other substance that isn't black, isn't a sgian-dhubh per se. (Sgian-chabar??)
    I'm pretty sure the dubh descriptor is not in reference to actual colour.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    26th July 12
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    Prairieville, LA (USA)
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    No question that such a small item draws much attention. My wife and I slip away to New Orleans for the weekend about once a month. We routinely stop in to shop at Antiques de Provence, and the owners (still) follow me through the store, LOL. Though we only live 50 miles away, I have been asked by one of the owners (repeatedly), "I bet you have trouble with that at the airport". My wife has suggested that maybe its best that I just learn a Scottish accent and play along.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    16th September 10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Layne View Post
    No question that such a small item draws much attention. ...and the owners (still) follow me through the store, LOL.
    Haven't had that problem....with my hair and beard, I get followed even on the rare occasions I'm not kilted.

    On the issue of what to wear, I'm firmly in the camp of wearing ONLY a functional blade. Always. Whether or not
    one is wearing a sgian, one should be firmly cognizant of one's space for reasons of personal safety, and that handles
    the worry of someone grabbing it. Since I was six, I have RARELY been without at least one knife on me. Too many
    uses; so many times it has saved the day (not in martial terms) to cut tape, open a package, get me back in the
    house if I've left the keys in other sporran/p@#*s. Where I grew up, boys were not grown until they could be trusted
    to SAFELY handle a knife, including paring/cleaning of fingernails. And control tempers; that is, by eight or nine.

    As far as the bottle openers, in many areas, the handle indicates being armed. I've always been told, humorously,
    of course, don't bring a knife to a gun fight (be prepared), and I add, seriously, don't walk into a possibly dangerous
    area with a bottle opener. Much better to have nothing more than confidant carriage and good awareness.
    Last edited by tripleblessed; 7th March 14 at 08:10 AM.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    27th October 09
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    Quote Originally Posted by Layne View Post
    No question that such a small item draws much attention.
    Does it? I've never, ever had any attention paid to my sgian dubh by the public. Never a question about it, not even a glance at it (that I could sense, at least). It's almost disappointing, as I actually wish someone would ask about it so I could show them the nice Damascus blade and talk about it.

    Maybe it's just a regional thing, as there are a lot of men who walk around here with knife sheaths on their belts. Nobody seems to notice or care.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    6th July 08
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    Montgomery Village, Maryland, near Washington, District of Columbia
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    I suspect that regional difference may be significant in the amount of interest shown. When I am out and about in the very metropolitan, very chic Washington DC area, where almost no one wears a belt knife, I get lots of questions. "Oh, is your sock knife real?" "Can I see it?" etc. Out in Western Maryland/Pennsylvania, much more rural, farming and hunting area, the only comment I remember getting, is when I wore a different sgian the second time I went to the same restaurant on one trip. The owner collects knives, and seeing I had more than one with me, correctly assumed I did also, and struck up a conversation. Otherwise it seems to be, "So he's wearing a knife. Isn't everybody?"

    Quote Originally Posted by Tobus View Post
    Does it? I've never, ever had any attention paid to my sgian dubh by the public. Never a question about it, not even a glance at it (that I could sense, at least). It's almost disappointing, as I actually wish someone would ask about it so I could show them the nice Damascus blade and talk about it.

    Maybe it's just a regional thing, as there are a lot of men who walk around here with knife sheaths on their belts. Nobody seems to notice or care.
    Geoff Withnell

    "My comrades, they did never yield, for courage knows no bounds."
    No longer subject to reveille US Marine.

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