What's new

Lotus, fabrication d'art

Lotus fabrication d’art (P. Hospital’s luxury brand)

On the hunt for Le Grelots, I came across this beauty. Over 13/16 and a sweet thumb notch, but it’s seen better days.

Lotus Old Composit.png
 
The same DMT/pocket hone method I used on my Grelot was also used on this Lotus. If you want to learn about this method, reference my other post Le Grelot - back from the dead. Most of the pitting looked surface level, almost like soap scum, but It was actually quite deep. I cleared away almost all of the pitting in under two hours.

When the tang is DMT’ed, you can see the divot the stamp makes. That is as far as I could go without digging into the stamp, which was unfortunately that shallow from the factory. The spine was de-pitted by holding the blade diagonally across the DMT and closer to a corner so that the two points of contact on the curved spine were closer together. Using a sawing motion, and slowly rotating the razor to cover all parts of the round spine, all the pitting was gone in 30 seconds to a minute. THAT’s why I love the DMT method.

After the DMT:
9719E2A2-6DC8-43ED-8102-E9088843A661.jpeg
5F9469CE-B893-4030-B9BD-8C64E2A89CCF.jpeg
4E2E9DA1-3EC8-480E-B648-A964C940C6D8.jpeg



After the 1000 grit pocket hone rub, and maybe worn 220 sandpaper? Surface rust is already forming as I moved my attention from the blade faces to the tang area:
D2F22A29-17B8-4616-93FB-6598B5E061A9.jpeg
6D09020A-FA4C-4455-8E21-BBB056A79E40.jpeg
33B126C6-25BA-4CB8-871A-7C8EC1C4DC2B.jpeg
2DF60294-4B4B-454B-9D73-FD1DA914FD49.jpeg



After 400 grit sandpaper:
53CECBBC-6E99-4722-AEDB-5154D2470CD4.jpeg
8DB54DF5-B38C-45D9-AAC0-37292286FDE5.jpeg
 
1000, 1500, 2500, 3000, flitz polish. I noticed that I had an easier time working out scratches if I use pairs of grits of roughly the same grit range. As in the 1000 and 1500 pair, and then the 2500 and 3000 pair. The pitting continued to diminish throughout the process, and now it’s almost completely gone. Always use fresh sandpaper in these upper ranges, and use every square inch of the paper.

The polish is even better than my restored Le Grelot, and they make a nice pair. The only thing is… which one gets the pre-CITES ivory, and which one gets the pink ivory?

4675AD44-B843-4A31-A111-2F8D43B0D8FD.jpeg
9C30D889-C08F-44CF-80CF-BFC32155BB3D.jpeg
47DE0BA7-BC7C-4A12-B787-BD29BD1A5E1F.jpeg
03E04D38-9D1C-40C8-8E13-4579CD8B7956.jpeg
A7EFD44E-830B-4823-AF90-184A2C334226.jpeg
313FCF39-42E3-447F-BD50-BE0D1861511D.jpeg
 
musicman980 Both of them have come up beautiful Sir!!! :001_tt1: :001_tt1: :001_tt1: :001_tt1: :001_tt1:
Nice Lotus - haven't seen one for a long while.

Thanks guys, I'm really satisfied with it. I bought it assuming it was a 1/4 grind, because it's essentially the Grelot 357 blank. It looks more like a half hollow though? Hard to tell.

If it was a 1/4 hollow I'd totally do an homage to the B&B LE Le Grelot from years ago - I've got pink ivory. Then I'd save the pre-CITES real ivory for the other Le Grelot.
 
fantastic job. im curious about the DMT method though, I read your other thread as well, but im still not sure exactly how you do the blades face with it? (or maybe I just need another coffee)...

Something like this?

dmt.jpg
 
fantastic job. im curious about the DMT method though, I read your other thread as well, but im still not sure exactly how you do the blades face with it? (or maybe I just need another coffee)...

Let’s get to work
A253DCB8-9ADD-4FD5-A93E-671C910B736C.jpeg


The spine is actually the part off the DMT. While working on the concave area, you want the edge to be as close to the DMT as possible without it actually touching it. This lets more of the blade come in contact with the DMT (still a very small amount though)

The stabilizer gets in the way though, so you would have to bring the blade to a corner of the DMT so the stabilizer hangs off. As you flip the blade over to do the other side, the corner changes.

As for blades without a stabilizer, I found that you can utilize the entire edge of the DMT, as long as it’s the part of the blade below the tang. The grind can get super thin, and if the full follow actually flattens out like a rattler grind you can cover more surface area on the blade. See the last pic for this.


So work the blade in a circular motion in sections, using pressure, starting below the spine hone wear, by moving the spine slowly away from the DMT like so:
EA0CF5B4-1BF7-4EA0-9351-880395016DB8.jpeg

594D2683-8D25-4A14-8CD4-116F69955F42.jpeg

694D928C-0D37-4E85-8076-CF924D987DAC.jpeg


And if the hollow flattens out like some hollow grinds, or you want to get rid of that belly, you can effectively work on 1/8-1/4” areas at one time. Imagine this part of the blade was flat on the DMT, super quick work:
4A578636-D65C-463B-9CF1-6B15105F00F8.jpeg
 
Last edited:
The ivory has been removed from another blade via pin vise, surgery successful. I don’t know which one to put it on, here’s some pics. I can adjust the height the blade sits in the scales with a new wedge so keep that in mind. The other would get this pink ivory, or I have a ton of ebony.

489B56F8-8500-4900-8AE0-F7698ADFCB4F.jpeg
14F95287-A174-4035-80A9-DF2EF78208D7.jpeg
C245C707-4E4C-496A-8270-1E32D7C73696.jpeg
CD9540FD-5419-48E7-BEC7-02DDE9E8BAA9.jpeg
D586D7A1-1AD4-412B-98F4-B30985BE63E6.jpeg
08FB0A29-4ED7-46CE-93A4-C5E19C12682A.jpeg
BFC6BA01-B502-4E0C-9348-28DA082D1E8A.jpeg
 
So the pink ivory was a nightmare. I only have hand tools here and ended up chipping it up - it's good for wedges now I guess.

That left the other ivory, which suits it well. Wedge is faux bone. It stands a smidgen over 6/8 now, making it the smallest razor in my rotation.

6BAE60F0-F628-4374-836E-11839D8EC194.jpeg
8E90881F-BA6B-4118-B727-B3A30B1FDC2D.jpeg
887CA2E1-3881-4DF1-A5DF-F21F90C7A50C.jpeg
 
So the pink ivory was a nightmare. I only have hand tools here and ended up chipping it up - it's good for wedges now I guess.

That left the other ivory, which suits it well. Wedge is faux bone. It stands a smidgen over 6/8 now, making it the smallest razor in my rotation.

View attachment 1027495View attachment 1027493View attachment 1027494


Wow mate that has come up beautiful, & the Ivory really is a match for that blade looks like it was made for it.
Overall that has come out fantastic a stunning restore for sure Well Done Sir!!! :001_tt1: :001_tt1: :001_tt1: :001_tt1: :001_tt1:
 
Had it's first test run, and it worked phenomenally. I've restored enough razors to say that the first shave is always amazing, so we'll see how it holds up. It was back to back with a W&B 15/16 quarter hollow, and it completely outperformed it - might be the smaller bevel angle.
 
Top Bottom