• Sewing Scissors

    From Brian Christiansen@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 19 03:41:21 2018
    I have a couple of pair of sewing scissors. Two are Fiskars, and will
    tell the story of why I have 2 if somebody wants me to, but my main
    questions is about my other pair.

    I have another pair that I suppose is part of my "inheritance" from my
    late mother. It is a pair of heavy duty Wiss scissors that are almost
    11 inches lomg when measured from the end of the handle to the end of
    the blade, and the "cutting part" of the blade is 5 inches long and
    fairly heavy duty.

    From a technical standpoint, I suppose the Wiss is a much better pair
    of scissors, but most of the time I use the Fiskars, the reason being
    that the is a little bit of rust on the Wiss but not the Fiskars.

    I suppose a bit of rust on the outside isn't any big deal, but some rust
    is showing up on the inside. The best idea I can think of is to perhaps
    and the blade with either really fine grit sandpaper or extra fine steel
    wool, treating the blade with some oil, and perhaps getting hold of a whetstone.

    I was also kind of wondering if, after I recondition them, if I should
    make some kind of holder/protector for them.
    --
    My Yonkoma: https://www.flickr.com/photos/brian0908/albums/72157680223526176

    The E-mail associated with the account is a "spamcatcher" account that I
    got to every couple of months to empty out, and anything sent to it will
    not be seen for probably several months, if it is seen at all.
    Brian Christiansen

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  • From Night Mist@21:1/5 to Brian Christiansen on Wed Mar 28 06:09:30 2018
    I cannot recommend a whetstone for scissors. The blade edge is not shaped right for that. I would just clean them up and see if there was anyplace locally to get them adjusted. If not it is a seemingly simple matter to adjust the screw, but I bet it
    is not simple at all. There may be something online or at the library about it. In truth, these days I would bet on the library for correct information.

    NightMist


    On Monday, March 19, 2018 at 6:41:26 AM UTC-4, Brian Christiansen wrote:
    I have a couple of pair of sewing scissors. Two are Fiskars, and will
    tell the story of why I have 2 if somebody wants me to, but my main questions is about my other pair.

    I have another pair that I suppose is part of my "inheritance" from my
    late mother. It is a pair of heavy duty Wiss scissors that are almost
    11 inches lomg when measured from the end of the handle to the end of
    the blade, and the "cutting part" of the blade is 5 inches long and
    fairly heavy duty.

    From a technical standpoint, I suppose the Wiss is a much better pair
    of scissors, but most of the time I use the Fiskars, the reason being
    that the is a little bit of rust on the Wiss but not the Fiskars.

    I suppose a bit of rust on the outside isn't any big deal, but some rust
    is showing up on the inside. The best idea I can think of is to perhaps
    and the blade with either really fine grit sandpaper or extra fine steel wool, treating the blade with some oil, and perhaps getting hold of a whetstone.

    I was also kind of wondering if, after I recondition them, if I should
    make some kind of holder/protector for them.
    --
    My Yonkoma: https://www.flickr.com/photos/brian0908/albums/72157680223526176

    The E-mail associated with the account is a "spamcatcher" account that I
    got to every couple of months to empty out, and anything sent to it will
    not be seen for probably several months, if it is seen at all.
    Brian Christiansen

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kay Lancaster@21:1/5 to Brian Christiansen on Wed Mar 28 21:42:04 2018
    On Mon, 19 Mar 2018 03:41:21 -0700, Brian Christiansen <brian_christians@hotmail.com> wrote:

    I suppose a bit of rust on the outside isn't any big deal, but some rust
    is showing up on the inside. The best idea I can think of is to perhaps
    and the blade with either really fine grit sandpaper or extra fine steel wool, treating the blade with some oil, and perhaps getting hold of a whetstone.

    I'd give them a rubdown with very fine steel wool and a little sewing
    machine oil as a lubricant to get rid of the rust, then send them out
    to be properly sharpened by someone who knows what they're doing.
    Scissors sharpening is a tricky business.

    Open the scissors blades on either pair, and look at the very narrow
    bright line that is just under the sharp edge of the blade. That's the
    "ride line". If you damage or remove or grind off that line, you've got
    dead scissors that probably are permanently wrecked. Amateurs like me
    can wreck scissors very quickly with any sort of grinder. In addition,
    various types of scissors require different grinding angles, hard to maintain by hand without practice.

    I was also kind of wondering if, after I recondition them, if I should
    make some kind of holder/protector for them.

    "wet" a cotton cloth with sewing machine oil and give the scissors, blades
    and all, inside and out, with the cloth, leaving a thin film of oil. Store
    the scissors, particularly if you're in a damp or salt air climate, in a
    closed plastic box wrapped in the oily cloth. When you're ready to use
    the scissors, wipe them down with a dry rag to remove excess oil and cut.

    Return the scissors, wiped down again with the oily rag, to closed storage, wrapped in the cloth. The idea is to keep a thin film of oil on all the metal surfaces so rust doesn't form.

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